Product category:
Materials
News Release from: Sabic Innovative Plastics | Subject: Ecomagination initiative
Edited by the Buildingtalk Editorial
Team on 28 February 2007
Supporting green building with versatile
materials
GE Plastics supports green building trends with versatile materials for energy conservation, sustainable design and recyclability.
GE Plastics has a broad portfolio of materials that support the accelerating green building movement to reduce the environmental impact of buildings by boosting their energy efficiency, resource conservation, and sustainable design As part of GE's ecomagination* initiative, GE Plastics is developing environmentally responsible engineered plastics that are excellent candidates for green applications
This article was originally published on Buildingtalk on 16 Nov 2005 at 8.00am (UK)
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Specifically for the building and construction industry, the company's wide array of sheet products for energy-efficient roofing and glazing applications, and resin grades for lightweight, recyclable roofing, offer builders a host of options for green structures.
"Green building is moving into the mainstream, and GE Plastics' products give our customers the materials they need to succeed with this new opportunity," said Carina Viola, industry manager, Building and Construction for GE Plastics, Specialty Film and Sheet.
"Our plastics can replace traditional building materials in glazing, roofing, and interior applications to deliver environmental benefits along with greater design freedom and reduced system costs".
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Lexan Solar Control IR polycarbonate sheet from GE Advanced Materials, is helping to block the elements from crowds as they come and go at the ArenA in Amsterdam.
Energy Conservation.
Today's builders must balance the increasing demand for designs that admit large amounts of light with concerns about energy costs.
The use of specialized polymer glazing instead of traditional glass can achieve both.
One approach is the use of additives that block near-infrared (IR) heat but admit light.
In the United States, Centerpoint Translucent Systems, LLC - a manufacturer and distributor of residential roofing products - used GE's Lexan* multiwall sheet for a translucent roofing system that allows penetration of natural, filtered daylight into living areas without the energy loss and higher heating and cooling costs of glass roofing inserts.
In fact, the new translucent roofing system will be used on the National Homebuilder Mainstream GreenHome in Raleigh, N.C., which is expected to be completed in the spring of 2007.
In the Netherlands, Lexan Solar Control IR polycarbonate (PC) sheet encloses the four escalators leading to the Amsterdam ArenA.
The escalators are designed to help handle large crowds, which can lead to uncomfortable temperature levels within the enclosures.
Lexan Solar Control IR sheet helps absorb infrared and near-IR radiation from the sun, potentially reducing interior heat buildup by as much as 40 percent.
In addition, it can offer up to 60 percent more visible light transmission than other plastic-based, IR-absorbent glazing products.
Sustainable Design.
Sustainable design emphasizes the use of renewable resources and a more-efficient use of all resources.
Engineered thermoplastics can not only replace traditional building materials whose supplies are limited, but also support sustainability efforts such as the use of alternative energy sources in homes and commercial buildings.
By replacing expensive and cumbersome metal with GE's Noryl* resin, Norway's Solarnor AS developed a reservoir for its solar panels that provides maximum performance with minimal environmental impact.
Noryl resin withstands high water temperatures and offers excellent hydrolytic stability under constant exposure to water.
Further, the GE material is intended for conformance with strict European Union environmental guidelines.
To support the shift away from consuming large amounts of fossil fuel, the greenhouse industry is also using GE's technology.
A Dutch hydroculture company has constructed greenhouses using GE's Lexan ZigZag* PC double-wall roofing panels to collect extra energy from sunlight that can be sold as surplus.
The unique panels provide higher light transmission than glass while ensuring excellent insulation properties.
Recyclability.
Many of today's plastics lend themselves to recycling efforts.
Using GE Plastics' Geloy* XTW resin, ArmorLite Roofing created the first patented polymer slate, shake, and tile.
The Geloy XTW resin helps make ArmorLite roofing a very smart choice for environmental protection.
Because the GE polymer weighs so much less than wood, concrete, metal, and asphalt, ArmorLite roofing can significantly reduce fuel consumption used in shipping.
Further, Geloy resin meets recyclability standards, and manufacturing waste is reused in new roofing.
For more information on GE's materials for building and construction, please visit GE Plastics' website.
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