You Too Can Be Fabulous and Green!

February 19th, 2010

(Article starts with video)

So I’ll use this series to uncover all that’s green and sexy, fun, fabulous AND affordable.  Yes, I know…affordable is relative.  I mention in my new DVD  that I still haven’t found fashion forward green shoes in my size that are affordable.  I love N********M because they have lots and lots of sexy shoes in size 11 in the $100-$150 price range.  As far as I know, they’re not green…but they are cute.

And I don’t mind saying that when it comes to style, it’s cute first, green and affordable, second.

WTH?!

I’m just being honest.   You’d expect a woman who’s called “The Green Living Goddess” to be decked out in all green, all the time, right?  Would you expect her to do that if it meant that she’d be homeless and carless with neither pot nor window?  I didn’t think so.  One day I will wear eco-luxury fashions…but today, February 19th, 2010, is not that day.

So I make tradeoffs – a term I explain in my DVD  (ugh, another shameless plug; forgive me).  And since I know which fabrics are green, I can spot them at stores where the clothes are sensibly priced.  Sure, there was a time when I loved shopping for clothes at thrift stores, but it was during the 20th century.  Not a fan of antiques either;  lived in Budapest, Hungary for 18 months…hated it.  Mostly because it was antique.  (Good night, that’s one old town.)

When it comes to clothes, I’ll uncover affordable, fashion forward green stuff that doesn’t give me sticker shock .  As I find them, I’ll show you pieces that are under $100, sometimes way under.  As I’m able to make deals with stores, I’ll shoot video.  Here’s my one caveat: I will not jump through hoops to promote stores that want me to jump through hoops for the privilege of promoting them.   So in some instances, I may not name the store; I’ll just show the garment and name the fabric so you have an idea of what’s possible.

I’ll also spotlight sexy green cars, green motorcycles, green sports gear, fun and so on.

So in this series, you won’t get ‘shop at the thrift store, wear organic cotton t-shirts and eat granola’ kind of advice – although I do have an interesting take on eating meat and organics which you can see in my (free) video series – The Most Frequently Asked Questions About Going Green.  What you will get is a celebration of green affordablosity – affordability and fabulosity -- and the dish on how to be your fabulous self in a way that’s more environmentally friendly.

Aaaand I have to weave lots of green education into the fabric of my articles, but hopefully it will be so much fun, you’ll embrace it and spread the word.

And when you comment -- and I hope you will -- you have my permission to introduce wonderful new words like affordablosity.  Let’s make the comment section as edutaining as the articles!

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Greenhearts to the Rescue!! Stat!

February 19th, 2010

 

  This is the first article in my new series Doing Well by Doing   Good.  It’s an old concept, with a new twist.  Of course, if you’re already a greenheart, this is nothing new.

I recently read an article about how quickly buildings, landscapes and blocks decay and how much square footage would probably be built and remodeled over the next 20 years.  Mindboggling to learn that over the next 25 years,     300 billion square feet of  space will be newly built or remodeled.  And over half of that, 192 billion square feet, will be homes, condos and apartments. 

And? 

And I see that as an opportunity for the average or well-to-do greenheart to get in the real estate investment market and do well by reshaping our landscape to be green.  The landscape will be reshaped –- the big question is “By whom?!” 

Many of the nouveau-riche who built wealth before (and lost it during) the recession were real estate investors who bought fixer uppers and rented or sold them.  The average residential investor was mainly interested in buying low, doing half-a**ed paint-and-run remodels, then renting to unsuspecting victims looking for a decent home at a reasonable price.   And guess what happened to the renters?  Utility bills crushed them and as they sought more affordable living space, the empty homes they left behind became a financial burden for the investor/owners…and you know the rest . 

 The difference between then and now is that the high rate of foreclosures and bank failures has made an unusually large stock of homes available at bargain prices for investors.  But the same tide that washed out homeowners also washed out the paint-and-run investors…and the reckless big bankers… and the greedy mortgage brokers working with callous sub-prime lenders.  Doggonit I digressed, didn’t I?

So who will help develop and reconstruct our built environment over the next 20 years?  Hopefully a new wave of greenhearts who want to do well by doing good and who aren’t intimidated by what happened to the last crop of residential investors…and homeowners.

 According to green business expert  and PhD Glenn Croston, “one opportunity at the present is for investors to buy cheap properties and invest in energy efficiency for the property.  People are increasingly aware of and seeking out energy efficiency, so this makes properties more valuable in the long run.”    

I’m hoping, through this article, and through future collaborations, to inspire a tidal wave of greenhearts to get into the market and start renovating older existing homes to be green…before someone else does.  Unfortunately, there’s no stimulus money set aside for green renovations for investment properties.  “Not yet anyway, because there are too many homeowners whose primary residences need work” according to an official at Georgia Environmental Facilities Authority.   “We’ve gotten requests but those programs don’t exist yet at the federal level.” 

In an effort to end on a high note, I’ll say this:  It is possible to assemble your own “incentive package.”  Many state utilities offer financing for energy efficient appliances like HVAC units and for insulation.  Look for guidelines that don’t exclude investors with language like “primary residence only.”  For example, a representative at Laclede Gas in St Louis, MO, says “as long as the homeowner or investor is a credit-qualified Laclede Gas customer, they’re eligible for the program.  They can purchase up to 4 heating systems.”

I know there are lots of issues I didn’t discuss here but this is just the first in the series.  I’m being called to develop a template of state incentives you can use to get “credit” for greening your investment properties.  I’m also being called to start or push the movement to get federal incentives for investment properties.  I think this is what it will take to create the wave of people I’m hoping to inspire.

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The Most Frequently Asked Questions About Going Green

February 19th, 2010

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