Green Building or Greenwashing in Kfar Saba?
Mar 15th, 2008 by Karin Kloosterman
Slowly, but surely Israel is catching on to the idea of green building. We are wondering if the Israeli-style new “green” building neighborhood set to take over 650 dunams of land in Kfar Saba is really as green as it boasts.
A while back we read about single-family homes to be built there (a la white picket fence middle America suburbia) replete with tree-lined neighbourhoods and recycling and compost compartments built into the kitchen. Although solar energy panels were mentioned, implementing green technologies and concepts does not necessarily green a building or neighborhood make.
Israel is too small to keep developing its open spaces. We’d like to see a movement happening, where more people are encouraged to go green in the city — by revamping old apartments into shiny new green abodes. Have any good ideas to make this happen?
- Israel’s First Green Apartment Building
- Building Green: Jerusalem’s First Sustainable Housing Development
- Plantware: Fantasies About Building Houses From Living Trees
- Florentine Fights Back
- Green MK Dov Khenin to Run for Mayor of Tel Aviv
- City Tree: A Green Oasis in the Middle of Tel Aviv
- Open Green Houses: Eco-Architecture Tours in Tel Aviv
- Green Maps: Navigate Your Way Through Eco-Living
- REAL(ly) Affordable and Sustainable Housing Hits the Negev
- The Hills are Alive: Music Goes Green in Jerusalem’s Valley of the Cross
