Articles - Oakland Tribune Article
Oakland Tribune
Saving the Planet, One Paint at a Time
By Cecily Burt, June 3,2004
Armstrong Paint is well known for gravelly voiced
radio ads featuring a “three sevens and a one-two-three-four!”
phone number.
But if Mitch Fine has his way, the painting, roofing, and window
business soon also will be recognized as a leader of ecologically sustainable paints and building styles.
After almost 40 years in San Francisco, Fine recently relocated
Armstrong’s corporate offices to the old Berkeley Farms
building on San Pablo Avenue in Emeryville. At first glance, the
mustard-hued building looks like any other commercial structure.
It is anything but.
It sports solar panels, high-efficiency fluorescent lighting,
original concrete flooring, and area rugs made from recycled wool
carpets. Plus some ficus trees to suck up any unlikely carbon
monoxide.
And sure to warm the hearts of naturalists everywhere are gardens
encircling the front parking lot.
More than 40 different species of shrub, tree, and flower native
to the temescal creek watershed and oak woodlands grow outside,
all identified by a small sign with a name and number.
Those plants will form the basis for a new, all-natural brand
of Temescal Creek interior paints and stains with absolutely none
of the toxic volatile organic compounds commonly found in house
paint. The number on the plant outside will correspond to the
stain or pigment identified in the store, so kids can learn where
it all comes from.
There are Californian wild grape vines, creeping snowberry, Manzanita,
big ripe strawberries, seaside daisy, woodland rose, and Berkeley
sedge. The acorns harvested from a live oak tree will produce
a tan pigment. The leaves of an arroyo willow will produce a yellow
tint. Green hues will come from the tall, segmented stalks of
the horsetail reed.
“ When you ask most kids where their food comes from, they
say, ‘the store,’ ” said Fine, the company’s
general manager. “ we want people to see the gardens then
see the paint, to connect kids to nature.
Armstrong specializes in painting, roofing, and construction.
It took four years and four million dollars to rid the old Berkeley
Farms building of asbestos and transform it into a model for sustainable
development.
Carl Gaard, an interior designer and cabinet maker from New York,
is designing interior education displays and interactive children’s
play room, complete with an under-counter tunnel. He and Fine
share similar philosophies, Gaard said.
“We are in the process of creating a new-layer of Armstrong
Construction – whole home construction and maintenance,”
he said. “ In other words, how to create a house that is
in tune with nature and is in tune with nature and provides health,
safety, and happiness. A wall-sized display will take people the
construction process step-by-step, showing how new structures
can incorporate green technology for lighting, heating, cooling,
and insulation to reduce energy bills. It also describes household
problems such as molds and what can be done to combat it.
Fine said he gained inspiration from Sim van der Ryn and Bill
and Helga Olkowski, members of a group who founded the Farallones Institute and created the Integral Urban House in West Berkeley
by transforming the two-story Victorian into a self-reliant, mini-ecosystem
and educational center.
“ Forty percent of our energy consumption in the United
States comes from the building construction, materials, and maintenance,”
said Fine, who is the company founder and owner of that unmistakable
radio voice.
“ The way we design and the way we build public space is
the key to conserving our resources…the waste we create
is part of the reason we’re in Iraq. We have the technology
to save energy,” he added.
To give customers a healthier choice, the company offers a line
of natural plant-based interior paints from pigments created in
Hawaii and Germany and manufactured for Armstrong by an outside
company.
The new Temescal Creek line of interior paints will be the first
created exclusively by Armstrong, Fine said. None emit VOCs, which
can cause some people to experience eye and respiratory problems,
headaches or dizziness even after short exposure.
The company has also created a new, non-toxic line of kids’
finger paints – the seven colors of the rainbow made of
all pant-based ingredients.
“ We make blue out of a sweet potato, green out of moss,
and black out of kukui nuts,’ Fine said, explaining that
some –not all– finger-paints the market are not healthy
and that long-term exposure to them could cause health problems
in some children. Within weeks of moving in Fine received a notice
advising him that the city would like to acquire his property.
Turns out it is where Emeryville would like to build its planned
Center for Community Life.
So Fine took Emeryville officials on a tour of his building to
explain how its educational component could be incorporated as
a demonstration garden into the Center for Community Life.
“Obviously, it is a labor of love,” said councilmember
Nora Davis. “ I was so impressed by the fact that he chose
Emeryville and is so committed to doing what he is doing…Mr.
Fine is defiantly the type of business we want to encourage.”
He’ll have a chance to show the community at large at the
building’s grand opening celebration Saturday from 11 a.m.
to 6 p.m. The day will feature tours, food, live music, and a
charity raffle to benefit the Emeryville Senior Center and finger-painting
for kids.
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