Wednesday 25 July 2012

Can Your Washroom Benefit from a Touch-Free Retrofit?

Whether you’re trying to decrease natural resource consumption or absenteeism, touchless washroom fixtures may benefit your facility’s efforts. The rapidly evolving technology eliminates the need for manual fixture operation, lowering the risk of cross-contamination. Meanwhile, the equipment dispenses only as much water, soap, warm air, or paper toweling as needed to cut down on waste. FEWER RESOURCES AND SICK DAYS Sustainability initiatives and hygiene considerations are frequent motivators for touchless retrofits. Eliminating the risk of wasteful practices, like faucets left running, can result in considerable savings, says Rick Nortier, product manager for faucets with manufacturer Sloan Valve. “The CDC recommendations call for a rinse, soap for 15 seconds, a final rinse, and using a paper towel to turn off the manual faucet,” Nortier explains. “The whole time you’re soaping and drying your hands, the water is still running. If you don’t rely on the user to turn the water off, however, you’ll save water and money.” Many users are loath to touch washroom handles, levers, and buttons for fear of cross-contamination, Nortier adds, which can lead to fewer users washing their hands properly. “People would prefer to touch as little as possible while in a restroom, such as avoiding cranks on paper towel dispensers,” says Bill Gagnon, vice president of marketing and key accounts for Excel Dryer. “Having a hands-free environment eliminates those concerns and increases usability.” FEATURES THAT FIT YOUR FACILITY Look at occupancy patterns to determine the right specifications. In many cases, an infrared sensor detects a visitor’s presence correctly. Some newer products require a hand wave – if the fixture is in a narrow area, wave technology keeps it from activating when people pass by at close range. Settings like the distance required for dispenser activation can often be changed in-house with no special tools, says Vince Rountree, Sr., marketing manager of the office building segment at Georgia-Pacific Professional. If sustainability is your main reason for updating the washroom, look for products certified by an independent third-party organization. Besides UL, ASME, and other minimum requirements, ask about certifications like: WaterSense: Indicates water efficiency in irrigation and plumbing products. GreenSpec: Shows inclusion in a database of green products, specifications, and practices. Maximum Performance (MaP): Compliance with a voluntary testing protocol aimed at quantifying how effectively various water-efficient flushometer-bowl combinations evacuate waste. Some washroom fixtures, such as Sloan’s Basys faucets, can also feed data into your building management system, allowing you to monitor faucet usage. Excel plans to equip its Excelerator dryers with the technology by the end of 2012. TROUBLESHOOT POST-INSTALL ISSUES If the sensor isn’t functioning like it should after the installation, troubleshoot first – the problem might be as simple as a dead battery, which is often the culprit with otherwise low-maintenance fixtures. “Most batteries are good for a certain number of uses, usually over18 months to two years,” says Bob Benazzi, former senior partner at Jaros Baum & Bolles, a mechanical and electrical consulting and engineering firm. “With a two-year battery life, I would replace all the batteries in the building in the 18th month.” Sensors in a wired fixture may go out of alignment if a vandal tampers with the electronic eye or hits the fixture so hard that the sensor inside is jostled out of place, Benazzi says. “Manufacturers have become more sophisticated with sensing systems,” adds Dave Fisher, engineer of research and development at World Dryer. “For example, if something is continually in the sensing zone, our system assumes that someone’s vandalized the unit. It may not operate, but it’s not continually running or switching on and off.” Touchfree products typically require less maintenance because eliminating the need to touch the product reduces the potential for abuse, Nortier says. If your area has high sediment, check your faucet’s solenoid valve and filter for damage. Continue regular soap and towel checks to ensure an adequate supply. Otherwise, you may be able to decrease more time-intensive maintenance to annual or semiannual tasks, such as blowing out the hand dryer’s insides with compressed air. “You can lower energy and operational costs with touchless hand dryers and other products and reduce water use with touchless faucets,” Gagnon says. “All of those costs are eliminated by using high-efficiency touchless fixtures.” Janelle Penny (janelle.penny@buildings.com) is associate editor of BUILDINGS. found here:http://www.buildings.com/ArticleDetails/tabid/3334/ArticleID/14434/Default.aspx

Not a bad read for those of you interested in a completely touch less washroom

Tuesday 24 July 2012

The Japanese Are Once Again Needlessly Innovating And It’s Awesome | WebProNews

The Japanese Are Once Again Needlessly Innovating And It’s Awesome

I love Japanese scientists and inventors. They needlessly innovate in areas that we all thought were done with innovation years ago. The toilet? They made it better. The shower? They made it better. I think I’m starting to see a trend here and today’s innovation continues that trend in bathroom ingenuity.

Meet the Camitool, a hands-free automatic toilet paper dispenser. After years of automatic paper towel dispensers proliferating across the world’s bathrooms, it seems odd that an automatic toilet paper dispenser took so long. It makes perfect sense too. Why would you want to touch toilet paper in a public place that’s been touched by everybody else’s stank hands? It’s gross.

The Camitool is currently being used in hospitals across Japan. That’s the obvious first place you would put these little guys at, but it should be popping up at more locations across the country. It might even show up in the U.S. at some point. I highly doubt it though as we still don’t have those fancy Japanese toilets that put our archaic slabs of porcelain to shame.

Interested buyers can get a plastic or even wooden Camitool for $750 or $1,200 respectively. The price might be why we won’t see these guys popping up in bathrooms across the world. I guess we’ll have to deal with grabbing toilet paper that’s already been handled by who knows what.

[h/t: Geekosystem]

Wow fantastic a new automatic toilet paper dispenser, this product will be a fantastic addition not just to a regular washroom but will make a disabled persons life that little bit better, but i think it will be a while before we see these around to to its hefty price tag

Friday 20 July 2012

Hand Towels; Preferential to Dryers/Tissues

Hand towels offer the most thorough and comprehensive cleaning experience yet it can be rather a long winded and arduous process sorting the wheat from the chaff, so to speak, when it comes to securing the finest hand towels which are readily available on the market. The purpose of hand towels is that they are reliable and resilient as well as durable and hard wearing and if you settle for merely average, run of the mill hand towels then this can cause no end of untold problems. Sure; these hand towels are better than shoddy, substandard hand towels but they are not brilliant, and do not dry palms and fingers properly, but instead disintegrate or stick to your skin. Yet hand towels can be rather marvellous, and of a superlative calibre. Not all hand towels are a waste of valuable time and hard earned cash. Oh no, not at all!

It is imperative that you make sure that <a href="http://www.washroomuk.co.uk/paper-dispensers/c-fold-paper-towel-dispensers-1.html" > hand towels </a>are procured from an established and reputable retailer of hand towels if you are to walk away with a bargain and hand towels have to be in perfect working order and pristine condition if they are to be considered desirable and sought after. No one can deny that hand towels from nenviro.com are not appealing and fault free, and we have an exemplary reputation where hand towels are concerned. We pride ourselves on our customer focused attitude and practical, pragmatic approach and always strive to ensure that you are the number one priority at all times.

Each and every one of our magnificent hand towels is created with the greatest care and attention to even the slightest of details by fully skilled and seasoned specialists. You will not be able to find any flaws in these hand towels and we guarantee that you will recommend hand towels to colleagues and friends alike. Hand towels are cost effective and eco friendly and constantly impress and deliver the goods every time. We know how important it is to get hand towels which are of a superlative calibre and you are bound to find hand towels which suit all requirements and personal preferences, no matter how specific they may be.

So what are you waiting for? We have a veritable plethora of handy hand towels available for you to peruse at your leisure at http://www.nenviro.com and our degreaser supplies clean up every time. These are necessities in any office building or household and essential to have by your side if you work in the catering industry.

Hand Towels with nenviro.com. We provide our customers with a diverse range of high quality eco friendly cleaning supplies as well as refuse sacks and catering disposables. Visit today for our competitively priced Degreaser.

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SCA completes purchase of Georgia pacific tissue paper operations | Washroom UK

So here is a bit of quick news for those of you following the tissue paper industry in the UK and europe, it has been released that the SCA one of the largest recycled tissue manufacturers in the USA has completed its purchase of Georgia pacific’s (lotus products for those that don’t know) tissue paper manufacturing company in europe to stop hurting its competition. The purchase of the company was for a whopping 1.65 billion dollars and was actually completed in november 2011 (sorry we are a bit late!) This should be great news for Europe especially the UK, Ireland & Switzerland Now as a retailer of toilet paper and toilet tissues this shouldnt really hurt our purchase prices but it should give us a greater opportunity to shop around for better prices. If you are looking for some toilet paper head here for our massive selection all available on a next working day delivery, if you need toilet paper dispensers then this link is for you

sounds like great news for georgia pacific's competition in europe that this toilet tissue sale has finally gone through

Thursday 19 July 2012

Billericay pupil wins school £2k by building a stadium with toilet paper tubes

A BILLERICAY primary school is celebrating after winning a borough-wide competition. St Peter's Catholic Primary School won £2,012 to spend on sporting equipment in a contest to create an Olympic stadium from recycled materials. ​ WINNER: Francesca Foster with council and Festival Leisure representatives CMCR20120717A-092_C Pupil Francesca Foster, in Year One at the Coxes Farm Road school, made the winning entry out of cardboard boxes, newspaper, toilet rolls and foil. The six-year-old's design received more than 9,000 votes out of 26,000 that were placed. Head teacher John Peoples said: "The prize money will go a long way towards improving our indoor PE facilities. "All the children thoroughly enjoyed taking part in the competition as part of our Olympic-themed Week, which we held in school. The competition was organised by Festival Leisure Park and Basildon Council. Peter Scopes, manager of Festival Leisure Park, said: "2012 is a year of sport for the country and it is fantastic to reward the community in some way." Alastair Kay, recycling officer at Basildon council, added: "All the entrants showed a great understanding of recycling as well as highlighting their creativity and imagination." http://www.thisistotalessex.co.uk/Pupil-wins-school-pound-2k-building-stadium...

Congratulations to francesca foster for winning the school £2000 making a stadium out of recycled materials and toilet roll tubes

The Greener Grass: Paper towel dispensers

<blockquote class='posterous_long_quote'><div style="font-family: Times,Times New Roman,serif;">Wow, it's been way too long since I posted something on my blog. So I'm making a renewed effort to do so more regularly, because (as I read someplace that I'm supposed to say to myself every day), "I AM A WRITER!!"</div> <p> <div style="font-family: Times,Times New Roman,serif;"> Let's see, how 'bout I start with one of my pet peeves... "automatic" bathroom paper towel dispensers. I've mentioned them before. I haven't met one I've liked. Well, maybe one. But all the others either don't work at all, and I therefore look like a fool waving my hand above, below, to the side, and in front of the darn things trying to get them to acknowledge my presence...or they (reluctantly and for spite) roll out about an inch and a half of paper for me to dry my hands on. If there are other men waiting in line for a paper towel, I feel especially stupid. I know they are staring at the back of my head, thinking "What's wrong with this guy? Why can't he get a simple paper towel dispenser to work?" I've said before in sermons that a man's greatest fear is to be deemed a failure. Well, this is the place where that happens more than anywhere else - more than at home, more than in the board room, more than on the basketball court. It's in bathrooms. The great enemy of a guy's self-esteem is the "automatic" bathroom paper towel dispenser.&nbsp;</div> <p> <div style="font-family: Times,Times New Roman,serif;"> I know why we don't like them and they don't like us. It has nothing to do with that little infrared thing on the front of the dispenser. It's about <i>control.</i> We can't control them. Unlike the old-style paper towel dispensers with the silver crank on the side (eww, germs!!), and unlike the less-old-style kind that you still see in some bathrooms, the kind with the lever you can push (eww, germs!!) that ACTUALLY WORKS, the "automatic" dispensers have a mind of their own. (That's why I put "automatic" in quotes.) No matter what you do, the dispenser has the power in the relationship. And we humankind don't like that. Ever since the Garden of Eden, we've fancied that we could be like God (Genesis 3:5). And when you're in the bathroom with one of these new, no-touch paper towel dispensers, you just can't be like God. The paper towel dispenser is, for that brief, hand-wringing moment of time, God. You're not in control. <i>It </i>is.</div> <p> <div style="font-family: Times,Times New Roman,serif;"> So the "automatic" paper towel dispenser is a metaphor. It's a met</div></p></p></p></blockquote>

to say this guy doesn't like automatic paper towel dispensers is an understatement but to be honest he has some good points!

East Riding Residents Among Best Reyclers

East Riding Residents Among Best Reyclers East Riding's households recycled 60 per cent of their waste from bins last month (June). The recycling rate in the six trial areas was 70 per cent, with a big drop of 22 per cent in the waste being put in the green landfill bins. Councillor Symon Fraser, East Riding of Yorkshire Council's portfolio holder for environment, housing and planning, said: "Our residents are up there, among the best in the country when it comes to recycling. "Month by month, since the beginning of this year, the recycling rate has steadily gone up and the amount of waste sent to landfill has been going down." That 60 per cent recycling rate is based on the collections from the blue recycling bins, the brown bins for composting and the waste taken to the 10 household waste recycling sites. 1,872 tonnes of recyclables, ie glass, paper, plastics, cans and Tetra Pak, was collected from the blue bins last month compared with 1,292 tonnes in June last year, a jump of 45 per cent in just one year. 5,260 tonnes of garden waste, food waste and cardboard was collected from the brown bins, compared with 4,437 tonnes in June last year, an increase of 19 per cent. The waste in the green bins, which goes to landfill, was down by 15 per cent. This means that 941 tonnes less waste was sent to landfill last month compared with June last year, making a saving on landfill tax. In April, the council started a trial in six areas across the East Riding based on fortnightly collections of the blue recycling bins and the green landfill bins. The trail was extended in June to provide a fuller picture of the varying areas and demographics. The monthly figures broken down by area are: Beverley: Last month, 171 tonnes of glass, paper, plastics, cans and Tetra Pak was collected from the blue recycling bins, 38 tonnes more than in June last year, a 29 per cent increase. The amount of waste collected from the green landfill bins in the Beverley area was 14 per cent less than in June last year. Bridlington: Last month (June), 249 tonnes of glass, paper, plastics, cans and Tetra Pak were collected from the blue bins, 61 tonnes more than in March last year, an increase of 33 per cent. The amount of waste collected from the green landfill bins in the area was 14 per cent less than in June last year. Driffield: Last month, 148 tonnes of glass, paper, plastics, cans and Tetra Pak was collected from the blue recycling bins, 30 tonnes more than in June last year, a 26 per cent increase. The amount of waste collected from the green landfill bins in the Driffield area last month was 14 per cent less than in June last year. Goole: Last month, 229 tonnes of glass, paper, plastics, cans and Tetra Pak was collected from the blue recycling bins, 71 tonnes more than in June last year, a 45 per cent increase. The amount of waste collected from the green landfill bins in the Goole area last month was 21 per cent less than in June last year. Haltemprice: Last month, 324 tonnes of glass, paper, plastics, cans and Tetra Pak was collected from the blue recycling bins, 100 tonnes more than in June last year, a 44 per cent increase. The amount of waste collected from the green landfill bins in the Haltemprice area last month was 12 per cent less than in June last year. Holderness: Last month, 188 tonnes of glass, paper, plastics, cans and Tetra Pak was collected from the blue recycling bins, 34 tonnes more than in June last year, a 22 per cent increase. The amount of waste collected from the green landfill bins in the Haltemprice area last month was 15 per cent less than in June last year. Market Weighton/Pocklington: Last month, 219 tonnes of glass, paper, plastics, cans and Tetra Pak was collected from the blue recycling bins, 85 tonnes more than in June last year, a jump of 64 per cent. The amount of waste collected from the green landfill bins in the area last month was 18 per cent less than in June last year. http://www.aboutmyarea.co.uk/East-Riding/Hornsea/HU18/News/Local-News/227128-...

There we go a bit of good news today, it appears east ridings are one of the best recyclers in the country! go us, now we just need some nice steel washroom bins to help the recycling look better!