Page 42 - Amanda Andrei
Transcription
Page 42 - Amanda Andrei
42 WEDNESDAY, MAY 21, 2008 THE CURRENT CHINATOWN From Page 14 intern, two labels I was all too familiar with. My main problem with Chinatown was grounded in its sleepy appearance, its lack of kitschy tourism and gewgaws, and the absence of huge stores filled with ginger, anise and fresh fish. It barely resembles the vibrant Chinatowns of Manhattan or Queens, where Alex and I were about to spend the weekend. At the moment, though, the most important thing about Chinatown was deciding what to order. After settling on some dumplings, wonton soup and hot tea, we discussed our weekend plans. We were proud of ourselves. We were poor college kids with an itch to travel and a wallet that made that itch hard to scratch. But we knew how to work the system. We would split our meals and halve the costs. We would sleep on the floor of a friend’s apartment instead of in a hostel. We would buy a day pass for the subway and work that city’s public transportation until we had gotten our money’s worth. But our best deal yet, the marvelous bargain that we scored, was the $35, roundtrip Bill Petros/The Current Amanda Andrei discovered Chinatown on her way to New York. Apex Bus ride from 610 I St. in Washington to 88 East Broadway in Manhattan. We were good, we were golden, we were set. The only problem was the bus left at 2 a.m. At 1:30 a.m., we headed to the Apex stop and sat inside the bus office. We watched a video on the TV set, which featured a man and woman teaching useful phrases in Mandarin. I tried to pick out characters that I remembered from my semester of Chinese 101. I wasn’t doing so badly when the bus pulled up in the side parking lot to let the RENOVATION From Page 13 Dwellings. An industrial and environmental designer, he had gone green when chronic fatigue syndrome and depression affected his family. It occurred to him that the materials used in his house might be responsible. He repainted with nontoxic paints and replaced floor covering with bamboo flooring, eliminating glues and using only organic compounds. “In just six months I saw a difference in the family’s well-being. I really believe in building with low volatile organic compounds,” he said. In Weiss’ apartment, the kitchen — a typical jumble of standard appli— Betty Weiss, on her utility bills ances squeezed after a green renovation any which way into a cramped space — posed the biggest challenge for Guerra and Hall. First, Guerra enlarged a small aperture out onto the living room into a generous opening. Then he tackled the kitchen itself. Part of the problem with the original was its ill-considered storage space. He tore out the old off-the-peg cabinets, replacing them with custom-made designs. The space now houses fewer cabinets, but they have been so well-designed — for instance, two of them, which pull out on either side of the oven, carry bottles and spices on several narrow shelves — that Weiss finds she has plenty of storage. Made by suppliers in Vermont and Maryland, they are built from sustainable woods without the use of formaldehyde or toxic glues. These constituted the most expensive part of the project. But the results made for prime efficiency. An enormous hot water tank took up a large floorto-ceiling two-door closet just inside the kitchen, with only a few inches left alongside to store an ironing board and broom. Guerra tore it out and replaced it with a tankless water heater. It’s about the size of a fuse box and kicks on only when Weiss needs to use hot water. So while she’s out of town, she’s not spending money keeping a large tank heated. The extra ❝They’re $55 a month, down from $96.❞ passengers — all five of us! — put in our luggage and board. We stretched out our legs and put on our headphones. Maybe it wasn’t such a bad thing that the D.C. Chinatown was quieter and more laid back than the others. Maybe it doesn’t need an enormous Chinese supermarket to give it authenticity — a CVS with Chinese characters suffices. It wasn’t bustling and thick with different dialects — but it gave us what we needed and what we wanted. New York’s Chinatown was for visiting, but D.C.’s Chinatown is for me. space made room for a stacked Bosch Axxis washer and dryer, which she says are very energy-efficient, as well as her vacuum, ironing board and shelving for her cleaning equipment. Along with her washer and dryer, her key appliances are smaller than the norm. Her dishwasher is a GE Monogram with room for only four place settings. Her oven is an electric convection model by Elba that is only 24 inches wide. Her refrigerator, by Summit, is just less than 24 inches wide. The only appliance she couldn’t find in a small size was a microwave, so she went with a standard model. The sink has been set across the corner on the diagonal, giving her a large storage space beneath. Running behind the stove and the corner sink is a backsplash that looks like a piece of art: bright-red flowers and stalks pressed between two sheets made of an eco resin. Before she began, Weiss said, the scariest thing was finding the right contractor and choosing what to put in the apartment. But while Weiss was away, she left Hill to track down materials and samples for her approval. The countertop is Silestone, a sustainable quartz, and the floor is Marmoleum, a linoleum made with 100 percent natural ingredients. Guerra floated it above a warm wool underlay for heat and sound insulation, and clicked it in place under a thin wood lip to avoid using toxic glues. He painted the walls with colors from Benjamin Moore’s Aura paints collection, which release one-third as much volatile organic compounds as regular paint does. “The feeling in here is impossible to describe,” Weiss said of a space that had suddenly become a practical and pleasant place in which to work. “You can fit two people in here to cook, which you couldn’t before.” She’s equally delighted with her utility bills. “They’re $55 a month, down from $96.” Guerra said the decreased costs can be attributed not just to her energy-saving appliances and the tankless water heater, but also to the new vinyl-framed windows that replaced her old leaking bedroom windows and the new double-glazed windows overlooking the street. “People don’t realize how much heat goes out through bad fitting windows.” “I really enjoy the space now,” said Weiss.