Tuesday, April 19, 2011

Growth of Moss Pushes Limits in Seattle


Tai Koenig, left, and Mitch Jacobsen clear a Seattle roof. Mr. Jacobsen is a window cleaner but says, “There's money in moss.”

SEATTLE — There are many ways to measure the relentless precipitation and enduring gloom that have cloaked the Pacific Northwest the past few months.

Psychology: “You just have to carry on,” said Molly Corrigan, soaked citizen of this so often sunless city.

Utility: “Abundant Snowpack Assures Healthy Electricity Supplies,” trumpeted Seattle City Light, which generates most of its power through hydroelectric dams.

Danger: “Washington family survives avalanche in vehicle,” read a recent headline.

Little League: “Field closed,” say the sad signs on the diamonds.

And then there is the evidence procreating beneath your feet, through your yard, up on your roof, down your gutters and into your dreams: the march of the moss.

“The spores were really active this year,” said Robert Braid, caretaker of the Bloedel Reserve on Bainbridge Island, across Puget Sound from Seattle.


Inara McEwen, sitting on a bench by a reflecting pool at the reserve, noted the diversity: “There’s the moss that grows on trees, and there’s the moss that grows in your car.”

When Mr. Braid speaks about spores being active, what he is really saying is that after a particularly rainy winter (thank you, La Niña) and now amid a particularly rainy early spring (thanks again), the atmosphere has been ideal for moss to multiply. And so it has been doing just that.

That means this wet region is once again confronting its moss divide.

“So many of the calls we get are from people who actually want to get rid of moss,” said Sue Hartman, who helps answer the gardening hot line run by Seattle Tilth, which promotes organic and sustainable gardening. “But this being the Pacific Northwest, moss is really kind of a native plant. I personally love moss, and my pals here at Tilth also love moss.”

Noting that this has been “an extraordinary year for moss,” Ms. Hartman said Seattle Tilth tried to provide “a little therapy” for people whose image of a lawn or garden bed does not necessarily include moss.

“When we see something that doesn’t look right to us, our first instinct is we need to correct it,” Ms. Hartman said. “But if moss is growing somewhere, it’s growing there for a reason. Perhaps you’re trying to grow grass in a place where grass doesn’t want to grow.”

Of course, moss and grass are not always at odds. Sometimes moss grows on roofs, then grass grows in the moss and an ecosystem is born.

“We’ve just gotten more and more into moss because it’s been so much wetter,” said Mitch Jacobsen, co-owner of Better Window Cleaning Seattle. “There’s money in moss.”

Mr. Jacobsen and an employee, Tai Koenig, were about to scale the roof of Ms. Corrigan’s two-story home on another drizzly morning in Seattle’s Ballard neighborhood. For about $400, the men would rake and clear the roof, clean the gutters and then treat the roof with chemicals to slow the inevitable regeneration of moss.

Ms. Corrigan said that she and her husband were having the roof cleaned mostly for maintenance, but that they also hoped removing its soft mossy habitat would discourage a pair of raccoons known for their own procreative endeavors — “rooftop romance,” she called it. Neighbors had taken notice. Photographs were well-circulated.

“I don’t think they will like the rough asphalt,” Ms. Corrigan said of the roof tiles.

This push and pull between people and the elements here is constant but not always predictable. Mr. Jacobsen said his company often wrestled with what chemicals to use on roofs. While some residents have no problem with powerful phosphates, others who want moss removed worry about the runoff — particularly the increasing number of people who capture roof runoff in cisterns to water their vegetable beds. Then again, some of the newest “green” houses have roofs with moss deliberately planted on them.

At Bloedel Reserve, which claims to have the largest moss garden on the continent, growing moss — and keeping it from growing — takes work. Mr. Braid said he had noticed in recent years that the winter frost window had narrowed, and that the moss on rocks in the Japanese garden area had expanded in response. The problem is that the rocks are not supposed to be completely covered.

“You have to find that balance of just the right amount moss on there,” he said.

Mr. Braid, who has been at the reserve for 26 years, has cared for the Japanese garden for 15. Last year the moss garden was added to his duties. He spends his days weeding wetlands, pulling overgrown huckleberry bushes, planting an alder or hemlock tree, always seeking a balance of light and moisture, for the moss.

“It’s peaking right now,” Mr. Braid said.

Seattle has a longtime opinion columnist, Knute Berger, whose nickname is Mossback. He often writes about preserving the built environment, of finding a balance between making way for the future and respecting decay.

Asked about moss, Mr. Berger said, “I’m all for letting it grow.”

Mr. Berger, who does most of his work here for Crosscut, an online journal, pointed out how wealthy the city had become over the past few decades, how new people with new money sometimes tore down little old houses — sometimes houses that are covered with moss — and built big new ones in their places.

“There’s something about the moss image to me that is kind of the democratizing aspect of nature,” Mr. Berger said. “You might have a lot of money and you can fend most of it off, but you’re still going to have some moss on your roof.”

Source:http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/20/us/20moss.html?_r=1&partner=rss&emc=rss

Friday, April 15, 2011

Turning windows into powerplants



If a new development from labs at MIT pans out as expected, someday the entire surface area of a building’s windows could be used to generate electricity — without interfering with the ability to see through them.

The key technology is a photovoltaic cell based on organic molecules, which harnesses the energy of infrared light while allowing visible light to pass through. Coated onto a pane of standard window glass, it could provide power for lights and other devices, and would lower installation costs by taking advantage of existing window structures.

These days, anywhere from half to two-thirds of the cost of a traditional, thin-film solar-power system comes from those installation costs, and up to half of the cost of the panels themselves is for the glass and structural parts, said Vladimir Bulović, professor of electrical engineering in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science. But the transparent photovoltaic system he developed with Richard Lunt, a postdoctoral researcher in the Research Laboratory of Electronics, could eliminate many of those associated costs, they say.

A paper by Bulović and Lunt describing their new system has been published online in the journal Applied Physics Letters, and will appear in a forthcoming issue of the print edition.

Previous attempts to create transparent solar cells have either had extremely low efficiency (less than 1 percent of incoming solar radiation is converted to electricity), or have blocked too much light to be practical for use in windows. But the MIT researchers were able to find a specific chemical formulation for their cells that, when combined with partially infrared-reflective coatings, gives both high visible-light transparency and much better efficiency than earlier versions — comparable to that of non-transparent organic photovoltaic cells.

In a new building, or one where windows are being replaced anyway, adding the transparent solar cell material to the glass would be a relatively small incremental cost, since the cost of the glass, frames and installation would all be the same with or without the solar component, the researchers say, although it is too early in the process to be able to estimate actual costs. And with modern double-pane windows, the photovoltaic material could be coated on one of the inner surfaces, where it would be completely protected from weather or window washing. Only wiring connections to the window and a voltage controller would be needed to complete the system in a home.

In addition, much of the cost of existing solar panels comes from the glass substrate that the cells are placed on, and from the handling of that glass in the factory. Again, much of that cost would not apply if the process were made part of an existing window-manufacturing operation. Overall, Bulović says, “a large fraction of the cost could be eliminated” compared to today’s solar installations.

This will not be the ultimate solution to all the nation’s energy needs, Bulović says, but rather it is part of “a family of solutions” for producing power without greenhouse-gas emissions. “It’s attractive, because it can be added to things already being deployed,” rather than requiring land and infrastructure for a whole new system.

Fine-tuning the cells

The work is still at a very early stage, Bulović cautions. So far, they have achieved an efficiency of 1.7 percent in the prototype solar cells, but they expect that with further development they should be able to reach 12 percent, making it comparable to existing commercial solar panels. “It will be a challenge to get there,” Lunt says, “but it’s a question of excitonic engineering,” requiring optimization of the composition and configuration of the photovoltaic materials.

The researchers expect that after further development in the lab followed by work on manufacturability, the technology could become a practical commercial product within a decade. In addition to being suitable for coating directly on glass in the manufacture of new windows, the material might also be coated onto flexible material that could then be rolled onto existing windows, Lunt says.

Using the window surfaces of existing buildings could provide much more surface area for solar power than traditional solar panels, Bulović says. In mornings and evenings, with the sun low in the sky, the sides of big-city buildings are brightly illuminated, he says, and that vertical “footprint” of potential light-harvesting area could produce a significant amount of power.


A prototype of the MIT researchers' transparent solar cell is seen on top of a promotional item for MIT's 150th anniversary celebrations.
Photo: Geoffrey Supran

Max Shtein, associate professor of materials science and engineering at the University of Michigan, says, “This work demonstrates a useful effect, and is based on very sound science and engineering.” But he adds that “it is but one of the many other methods by which a similar functionality could be achieved,” and says the biggest uncertainty at this point is that because they are so new, “the lifetime of organic PV cells is a bit of an unknown at this point, though there is some hope.”

In addition, Shtein says, “The potential of this technology is good if projected far into the future,” but only if the efficiency can be improved as the researchers expect it can.

As added benefits, the manufacturing process for the MIT researchers' solar cells could be more environmentally friendly, because it does not require the energy-intensive processes used to create silicon solar cells. The MIT process of fabricating solar cells keeps the glass panes at ordinary room temperature, Bulović noted. Installations of the new system would also block much of the heating effect of sunlight streaming through the windows, potentially cutting down on air conditioning needs within a building.

The research was funded by the Center for Excitonics, an Energy Frontier Research Center funded by the U.S. Department of Energy.

Thursday, April 14, 2011

Injured window washer rescued from 10-story building in Towson





 

Baltimore County firefighters and emergency medical responders on Thursday rescued an injured window washer who was dangling outside the 10th-floor at Edenwald, a senior residential complex on Southerly Road, across from the Towson Town Center Mall.

The window washer — who officials did not name — sustained “serious but not life-threatening injuries," said Elise Armacost, spokeswoman for the Baltimore County Fire Department. He was taken by ground transport to Maryland Shock Trauma.

A call came in at 12:18 p.m. requesting a “high angle rescue” response because a window washer was trapped, according to Armacost.

“He was lowering himself from the roof to wash the windows using a rope and harness system.," she said. "Something went awry. Instead of lowering him slowly down, it dropped suddenly and he banged himself against the building."

Source:http://www.explorebaltimorecounty.com/news/112767/injured-window-washer-rescued-10-story-building-towson/

Window Washer Rescued From 10th Floor Of Towson Building



TOWSON, Md. (WJZ) — Baltimore County crews make a high-rise rescue in Baltimore County.

Fire officials responded to the scene of a rescue at 800 Southerly Road in Towson Thursday afternoon.

A window washer in a harness was trapped outside the 10th floor of the Edenwald retirement complex around 12:18 p.m.

Tactical rescue personnel used a rope system to lower a rescuer from the roof. He secured the victim to the rope system and lowered him to a waiting platform. The rescue was completed around 1:10 p.m.

The victim was taken to Shock Trauma. His injuries are non-life threatening, but he was sent there because of the circumstances surrounding his injuries.

Source:http://baltimore.cbslocal.com/2011/04/14/window-washer-trapped-outside-10th-floor-of-building/

Towson window washer taken to Shock Trauma after 10th story accident

A window washer at Edenwald Retirement Community in Towson is on his way to shock trauma after sustaining injuries from an accident on the 10th story of the building Thursday afternoon.

The window washer was hanging from his harness for close to an hour, according to Baltimore County Fire Department spokeswoman Elise Armacost.

Armacost said the call came in around noon reporting that a window washer was trapped outside of the 10th floor.

“Apparently he was tryoig to lower himself from the roof and something went awry and he knocked himself against the outside wall and suffered minor injury,” she said.

BCFD dispatched a number of units to aid in the recovery of the victim. A rescue team specializing in this type of rescue was sent to the roof, where the victim was secured and lowered to a fire engine platform.

The victim’s name has not yet been released, and Armacost said she is unaware of what company he works for.

The victim injury level was considered Priority 2. According to Armacost, he was not sent to Shock Trauma because of life-threatening injuries but for the circumstances of this type of rescue. She said it was wise for the victim to be sent to Shock Trauma. The extent of the injuries are currently unknown.

The retirement community was not evacuated but a number of community residents could be seen observing the scene from outside of the building. Access into the 800 Southerly Road building was blocked-off during the incident.

Source:http://www.thetowerlight.com/2011/04/towson-window-washer-taken-to-shock-trauma-after-10th-story-accident/

Window Washer Trapped Outside 10th Floor Of High-Rise - Baltimore, Maryland News Story - WBAL Baltimore



Video Link: http://www.wbaltv.com/news/27546664/detail.html


BALTIMORE COUNTY, Md. -- Baltimore County fire officials are working to help get a trapped window washer off a building in Towson.
[uLocal photo from Viewer cass_i]
uLocal photo from Viewer cass_i

Fire crews were called to a high-rise building in the 800 block of Southerly Road shortly after noon after getting reports that a man was hanging from the building.

Fire Department spokeswoman Elise Armacost said the window washer was trapped in a harness outside the 10th floor.

Crews are working to free the man, who hasn't been identified.

Stay with WBALTV.com and WBAL-TV 11 News for more details as they become available.

Source:http://www.wbaltv.com/news/27546664/detail.html

Window Washer rescue underway in Towson



TOWSON, Md. - Baltimore County Fire Department officials are at a building in Towson where a window washer is trapped hanging outside the 10th floor.

According to Baltimore County Fire Department spokesperson Elise Armacost, he is hanging from a harness outside of a building at 800 Southerly Road.

No other information about the incident is available yet.

Source:http://www.abc2news.com/dpp/news/region/baltimore_county/baltimore-county-fire-rescues-window-washer-in-towson

Window Cleaning Hotline......Got a crisis?

ONCE upon a time, we called hotlines only in an emergency.

These days, however, we have hotlines to service even greater calamities, from our children's refusal to eat apples to an ignorance of the correct way to walk backwards up a hill.

Did you know that 14 litres of water evaporate in an average apartment each day? That one in four houses suffers from the growth of mould? Time to call the Fungus Hotline, which will promptly answer all your pressing spore-related questions.

If you have deep concerns about the council garbage collection, spillage and bin repairs, you're lucky if you live in the Sydney suburb of Rockdale. The establishment of the Rockdale Council Waste Hotline means all your anxieties about rubbish elimination can be, with the press of a button, alleviated.

Having a crisis trying to tell the difference between "knit" and "purl"? Well, before you drop another stitch, jump on the phone and call the Knitting SOS Hotline. There, you can also be counselled on how to form a 1x1 rib on an odd number of stitches and what to do when a vintage pattern demands you "work" one row.

"If you've ever felt intimidated," states the Window Cleaning Hotline, "by all the different options that you have when trying to treat a window, then watch our inspirational video!" The hotline also treats phobias about phosphate cleaning products and ingrained obsessions with stained glass.

Are you having a nervous breakdown about how to baste your Christmas turkey? Are you paranoid about handling perishable foods? Call the Butterball Turkey Hotline, which has a crisis centre that operates year-round.

How many of us have been in a quandary about flooring refurbishments? How many sleepless nights have we endured, vacillating between the many varieties of underlays? Do we really need to pay extra in the kitchen for a slip-free surface?

Waste not another second and ring the Carpet Hotline, where a floor-covering specialist will attend to your every dilemma. Your carpet expert will also help you sort your shags from your piles, and will never put you on hold - even if you just need some advice on the best colour for your toilet mat and matching seat cover.

Mandy Sayer's new novel, Love in the Years of Lunacy, will be published in two weeks by Allen & Unwin.

Source:http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/opinion/got-a-crisis-help-is-just-a-phone-call-away/story-e6frg71o-1226039300856

Saturday, April 9, 2011

Window Washer Creates Scare in Downtown Richmond


Did you see a man hanging from a red rope on the side of the Suntrust building downtown Wednesday afternoon? It was a window washer that appeared to be stranded and in need of rescue.

It happened sometime between 4:30 p.m. and 4:45 p.m. on 9th and Main Streets and prompted a call to the Richmond Fire Department for rescue.

Lt. Shawn Jones, a spokesman for the fire department, says a ladder truck was dispatched to the scene but when they spoke to the window washer, he refused rescue.

Jones says it was windy downtown and the man may have gotten tangled in the rope but then freed himself.

Source:http://www.wtvr.com/wtvr-window-washer-creates-scare-in-downtown-richmond-20110406,0,661129.story

Ninja Squeegee Pre-Order

Friday, April 8, 2011

Licensed window cleaners are required to carry a photo license in the UK

DODGY window cleaners are being targeted in a fresh crackdown in Dumfries and Galloway.

Householders and traders are being reminded to check the credentials of window cleaners in a bid to protect themselves against unlicensed cowboys.

PC Audrey Johnstone told the Standard: “Licensed window cleaners are required to carry a photographic license at all times when working and people should verify this.”

All licensed window cleaners must have Public Liability Insurance and be licensed with the council under the Civic Government (Scotland) Act 1982. If they fail to do so they could face prosecution.

Licensing Standards officer Richard Graham said: “The aim of licensing is to safeguard the public and ensure that anyone working as a window cleaner is a fit and proper person to do so.”

For more information or to check licensed window cleaners in your area, contact Dumfries and Galloway Council on 01387 24922

Source:http://www.dgstandard.co.uk/dumfries-news/local-news-dumfries/local-news-dumfriesshire/2011/04/08/dodgy-window-cleaner-warning-51311-28479837/

Friday, April 1, 2011

Window Washers of New York (collection of archival images)

Click here for the slide:http://lens.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/04/01/glass-in-front-clouds-below/

If Slide 1 doesn’t make your heart skip a beat, you are either beyond fearless, a professional window washer or both. And if it doesn’t make your heart ache a bit, you may not remember that Roko Camaj, an Albanian immigrant who adored his job washing windows at the World Trade Center — so infectiously that he became the subject of a children’s book — was killed on Sept. 11, 2001.

No one could have anticipated peril of that magnitude. But window washing in a city of skyscrapers is an inherently dramatic subject. Very few other laborers report to work at such tenuous precipices. They clear panoramas for the rest of us by putting their lives and limbs on the line.

Who could blame Edward Massey for looking as nervous as he did in the November 1972 photo by Robert Walker? (Mr. Massey is in the newsboy cap in Slide 6, drawing on a cigarette.) A steel cable holding the scaffold on which he and his partner were standing had snapped 53 stories over Times Square, at 1 Astor Plaza. One end of it, unattached and swinging crazily, smashed through a window on the 52nd floor, opening an escape route through which the two — unhurt — were able to clamber into the office building.

Mr. Walker’s photo has everything: the anxious window washer, the hard-working recovery crew, the terrifyingly askew scaffold and a sense, in the distance, of just how high up this scene is set. We can even see a pair of suction lifters in the center foreground. As inherently photogenic as the subject of window washing might be, ingenuity and timing are still required to take a good picture — as is the ability to recognize that the best vantage may not yield the best image.

Sara Krulwich was assigned in August 1994 to photograph Mr. Camaj at 2 World Trade Center. “I joined him on the outside of the building,” she recalled. “The experience of putting on a safety belt and stepping into a little bucket attached to the outside of a World Trade tower was one I will always remember. It was one of those amazing New York experiences that make this job so great.”

Back on earth, and looking at the contact sheets, Ms. Krulwich and her editors realized that the pictures taken alongside Mr. Camaj weren’t as successful in showing the panoramic context of his job as those taken from inside the building.

Luck can play a role. For instance, Marilynn K. Yee didn’t set out in January 2006 to create an Abstract Expressionist portrait of the window washer Ricardo Espejo in a cameo role as George Washington (Slide 8). Her assignment was simply to shoot a new store on Broome Street called Despaña. Mr. Espejo just happened to show up for work. “I thought it was a strong image,” Ms. Yee said, “and was able to capture the soapy suds and the patterns of movements and shadows as he worked.”

Persistence, too, is a factor. In August 2006, Fred R. Conrad climbed a 12-foot ladder on the rooftop of 7 World Trade Center in order to clear the edge of the parapet and shoot straight down as Paul Aspuru and Oleh Hulyas washed windows overlooking ground zero. The photo (Slide 8) was never published. Mr. Conrad is undaunted, since the trade center site in the background looks so very different today.

“I want now more than ever to rephotograph the window washers, so that there will be a record five years apart,” he said last week. “I think it could be stunning.”

For those who remember Mr. Camaj up at these altitudes, however, the scene will seem a bit empty.