Sustainable materials

Which materials
should you use to
protect the planet?

Learn how to use better materials for your interiors that don't harm the environment.

Sustainable materials

 Promoting locally available materials that emit the fewest greenhouse gas emissions throughout their lifespan - that is, during their extraction, production, construction, maintenance, and disposal - can dramatically minimize the project's environmental cost.

As a result, when selecting interior materials, we must consider biodegradability, chemical composition, durability, and renewability.

In terms of these considerations, wood, bamboo, and stone are some superior options that use less energy during manufacturing than for example: concrete, plastics, and steel.

Sustainable material
Woods

While choosing wood over other materials can have a significant environmental impact if it is not sourced sustainably (check for FSC certification), there are numerous reasons why wooden building materials, furnishings, and decor are an eco-friendly option.

There are numerous advantages to incorporating wood in your interiors, ranging from heat retention to improved mental health.

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Sustainable material
Cork

Cork is best known for its association with wine and the office pinboard, but it is also an incredibly sustainable and versatile material for interior design. Today, many design projects are guided by ethical and environmental initiatives, and architects and designers are choosing cork as a leading building and interior material.

Cork, like hardwood timber floors, has a raw and timeless appeal due to its natural origin. Each piece is one-of-a-kind, with varying grain, texture, and color finishes.

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Sustainable material
Bamboo

Bamboo turns out to be not only beautiful and smooth, but also extremely durable, useful, and adaptive to work with. This is what makes it so trendy and cool. Bamboo is also environmentally friendly, renewable, and integrates into our lifestyles to help us live a more sustainable lifestyle.

Simply said, bamboo is one of the most versatile materials we can use in our daily lives.

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Sustainable material
Paper & Carton

Interior goods made of cardboard - particularly those manufactured from recycled and waste cardboard - have excellent sustainability credentials, and they also conserve energy in the manufacturing process. This material isn't as light or disposable as it seems.

Because it's durable and waterproof, you won't have to worry about your chair disintegrating if you spill a sip of water.

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Sustainable material
Copper

One of the most reusable and sustainable materials is this popular naturally colored metal. Copper is infinitely recyclable and does not degrade with age! It stays completely same each time without losing any of its assets. We remove less and less of this metal as it is increasingly recycled, and the world benefits.

You can even hope that the copper in your computer will become a lamp in your living room one day!

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Sustainable material
Glass

Glass is considered an environmentally friendly material since it is infinitely recyclable. While it is true that it is composed of sand, a naturally occurring material, its manufacture necessitates a significant amount of energy. Glass shipment also has a huge carbon footprint due to its substantial weight.

As a result, recycled glass should be preferred because it minimizes CO2 emissions while also conserving raw materials and energy.

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Sustainable material
Linen

One of the most biodegradable and fashionable materials ever created. Linen is obtained from flax plants, which grow without the use of fertilizers or pesticides. This means it is a renewable resource that is rapidly growing and can be produced without negatively impacting the environment. 

Sturdy, naturally moth-resistant, linen is totally biodegradable when not dyed. Ivory, ecru, tan, and grey are some of its natural colors. 

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Sustainable material
Hemp

Hemp is one of the most sustainable fibers you can use, according to multiple sources, including the Textile Exchange and The Made-By Environmental Benchmark for Fibers (which gives non-organic hemp a "C" rating, while organic hemp gets a "A" – the highest possible rating).

It has multipurpose applications, a short production cycle, a low capital requirement for cultivation, the potential for carbon-negative transformation, and it is an easy carbon sequestering material.

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Sustainable material
Recycled Materials

Recycling materials that reduce toxic waste and pollution has obvious immediate benefits for human health.

By reducing waste, recycled materials conserve natural resources, protect natural ecosystems, and promote biological diversity, all of which contribute to the biosphere's long-term sustainability.

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Be an expert at living more sustainably indoors.

Learn more about sustainable interiors, including how to create them, how they work, and the benefits they provide. Improve your ability to create better environments for yourself and the planet.