ReNews -- Remodelors Council News - 04/22/2008 (Plain Text Version)Lonny Rutherford, CGR, CAPS View Graphical Version | Subscribe to NAHB Publications | Email our Editor... In this issue: Where the Market Is FlushMake WaterSense® With an Efficient Bathroom Remodel Looking to promote a remodeling job that has the most bang for the buck? Homeowners know that remodeling a lackluster bathroom is a surefire way to increase a home’s value. According to the 2007 Remodeling Cost vs. Value Report, the average nationwide return on investment for a bathroom remodel is 78%, one of the highest in the home. Selling your clients on the benefits of remodeling a bathroom is easy. The next step is selling them on the value of a water-efficient remodel. Let WaterSense, EPA’s voluntary water efficiency labeling program, help you close the deal. There’s a reason the British refer to bathrooms as “water closets.” In the average home, toilets account for 27% of the water used indoors, and showers and faucets together account for another 33% — that’s nearly two-thirds of the water used in an entire house! Replacing outdated, water-guzzling plumbing fixtures with efficient models is a simple way you can help home owners save a precious resource and their pocketbooks. In fact, by offering a high-efficiency bathroom remodel with WaterSense labeled fixtures, you can help a client save more than 11,000 gallons and about $70 in water bills annually. Saving water means saving energy too. With the rising costs of natural gas and electricity, home owners will be happy to hear that retrofitting with WaterSense labeled bathroom sink faucets could shave 70 kilowatt-hours off their annual electricity use. That’s enough to power a hair dryer for 8 minutes a day for a whole year. The WaterSense label identifies products that not only save water (and energy used to heat that water), but that offer superior performance as well. To earn the label, products must undergo independent, third-party testing to ensure they meet EPA’s rigorous criteria for efficiency and performance. More than 145 toilets and 50 bathroom sink faucets and accessories have earned the label to date. Skeptics who installed some of the ill-performing low-flow toilets of the early 1990s should know that WaterSense labeled toilets are an entirely different breed. New technology and design advancements, such as pressure-assisted flushers and modifications to bowl contours, mean that double-flushing and clogging will not be an issue. The WaterSense specification for high-efficiency toilets requires that labeled models to meet stringent flushing standards and thoroughly satisfy drain line requirements. To find WaterSense labeled plumbing fixtures for your next remodel job, visit the WaterSense Web site. You can search for WaterSense retailer or distributor partners on the Meet Our Partners page; in addition, many manufacturers also sell their WaterSense labeled products online. WaterSense Labeled Products by the Numbers
For more information about WaterSense, and for a full list of labeled products, visit www.epa.gov/watersense. Stephanie Thornton is the Partner Outreach Coordinator for EPA’s WaterSense program. 2007 Remodeling Cost vs. Value Report: www.costvsvalue.com/index.html
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