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  Repairs & Maintenance   -   Environmental Issues
      Is Your Kitchen Making You Sick, Literally?

Headaches, burning eyes, itching skin, trouble breathing - sound familiar? It does to more than one quarter of Canadians who suffer from allergies, asthma or environmental sensitivities.

Recent research has shown that sometimes the cause of this discomfort is close to home - in fact, it's in the home. Though we hear a lot about the dangers of outdoor air pollution, studies are now showing that the quality of air indoors can be many times worse than the air outside.

Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation (CMHC), Canada's authority on housing, has done extensive research on indoor air quality and has some tools and tips to help Canadians improve the indoor environment.

For example, for people planning to renovate the kitchen, one of the most popular renovation projects, CMHC's publications have several suggestions.

First of all, it is helpful to think of your house as a system. One part of the home does not exist by itself. The home's indoor air quality is influenced by all the other parts of the house and how the house is used as a whole.

Since the kitchen is where most cooking, washing and cleaning happens, ventilation is particularly important. If you are installing a new range, use an effective exhaust fan or range hood vented directly to the outside to remove cooking odours and moisture. Fan noise is reduced if the motor is installed outside.

People who cook with gas stoves are exposed to combustion gases. To avoid this, either use sealed combustion gas stoves or wire the stove in such a way that the exhaust turns on every time the gas stove is used.

Solid surface counter tops and solid wood cabinets are emission-free unlike choices such as particleboard. Water-based floor and trim finishes have a low content of volatile organic compounds and are a good alternative to paints high in noxious fumes. If particleboard is used, seal all surfaces and edges with laminate or with sufficient coats of low-odour sealant. Use low odour latex-based paints when painting.

Hard finish flooring such as ceramic tiles are the best choice for the kitchen, followed by vinyl composition tiles. These avoid the emissions from volatile compounds found in carpets, linoleum and sheet vinyl flooring and the organic vapours in their cleaning compounds. Ceramic tiles are also easy to clean.

Before you wrap up your project, have a look under the sink. Despite their airtight containers, the collection of cleaners stored there are sending emissions into you home 24 hours a day. These are better boxed up and stored outside or placed in a sealed container. Better yet, buy only non-toxic products.

Return to: Environmental Issues

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