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Posted By atechsystems

 NEW GREEN TOWER IN MIAMI - The COR Building

A new high rise is going up in Miami’s design district, and its a lean, green, eco machine. A collaboration between Chad Oppenheim architecture + design, energy consultant Buro Happold, and structural engineer Ysreal Seinuk, the $40 million, 25-story, “COR” building will incorporate mixed-use residential and commercial space, integrating green technologies including wind turbines, photovoltaic panels, and solar hot water generation.
COR building, Miami, Miami Design District, Green building, sustainable skyscraper. LEED tower, green high rise in Miami, Chad Oppenheim Architecture and Design, Buro Happold, Ysreal Seinuk

The building’s exoskeleton is a hyper-efficient structure that provides thermal mass for insulation, shade for residents, and architectural elements such as terraces and armatures that support turbines.

 

COR building, Miami, Miami Design District, Green building, sustainable skyscraper. LEED tower, green high rise in Miami, Chad Oppenheim Architecture and Design, Buro Happold, Ysreal Seinuk

With an aim to attract creative and design-oriented businesses and professionals, the interior of COR features sleek commercial and comfortable residential spaces ranging from $400,000 to $2 million. Each residential unit will include Energy Star appliances, recycled glass tile flooring, and bamboo-lined hallways. In total, COR will play host to 113 residential units, 20,100 square feet of office space and 5,400 square feet of retail space (which already includes a café and furniture store). Estimated completion is scheduled for 2009, with the ground breaking ceremony in July of 2007.

COR building, Miami, Miami Design District, Green building, sustainable skyscraper. LEED tower, green high rise in Miami, Chad Oppenheim Architecture and Design, Buro Happold, Ysreal Seinuk

 

ATECH is going green also. Check out the watersaving shower heads.

 


 
Posted By atechsystems

Have Home Security Alarm For A Secure House

The growth of the internet has provided advances in many fields but none more important to home owners than the effectiveness of internet home security systems. The internet can provide home security in many ways that were either not possible or less effective before its invention. Old techniques relied on telephone lines and human reaction to let any home owner sleep at night and generally were outsourced to a company instead of having the ability to monitor the security themselves.

As the world is getting smaller and more people find themselves traveling for work or play the need for internet home security regardless of physical location has become a must. Another growing reason for internet home security is the popularity of having a second home or vacation property located far away from their primary residence.

Here are some of the common ways that home owners have been able to merge the advancements of technology to provide comprehensive and reliable internet home security.

Home Security Advances

Cameras: Home owners can now know exactly what is going on in any room at any time in their house with internet home security cameras. Viewable anywhere from either a computer or hand held device, any home owner can look on their property and loved ones to ensure everything is peaceful and quiet. There is no limit either to how many you have set up or the location and angle in which you want it making this option very flexible and very effective.

Home Alarm Systems: Using a PDA or other portable device, home owners can be alerted if a door or window is opened in their home. Setting up motion sensors that make a loud sound to alert you is only effective if you are in the home; however, these motion sensors would now send you a signal over the internet to notify you immediately even if you are not at home when it happens. Smoke alarms systems can also be linked into the internet allowing the home owner to contact the proper authorities in case any situation should arise.

GPS: Popular with home owners whom have expensive treasures they want protected. It is used by attaching a GPS device to their property which allows them to track its location in case anyone does break in and steal anything.

These advances allow any home owner to provide wireless home security monitoring to ensure that if anything happens at their house they can find out immediately and can notify their loved ones and authorities to react to any situation. These options are generally one time expenses to setup unlike traditional home security which involves the monthly payments for a security company to monitor your home for you.

Log in to Atech Systems website and find ways to protect yourself.


 
Posted By atechsystems

After a string of fire deaths in the area, state and local officials are placing renewed emphasis on the importance of smoke alarms.

Most recently, a fire tore through a mobile home in Eros on Wednesday night, killing 20-year-old Christopher Quinlan and his infant son Ryan Quinlan while the father was giving his son a bath.

The mobile home had a smoke detector, but it was not working.

Greg Thompson, Ouachita Parish fire prevention officer, said non-working smoke detectors have been too common factors in the spate of fatal fires.

"We've had nine fatalities in Ruston, Monroe and Ouachita Parish in the last three and a half months," Thompson said. "In the last two weeks, the state has had 15 deaths. It's unusual to Louisiana, and a high rate when you compare its 4.5 million people to the U.S. population."

Thompson said the parish fire department will be pushing for residents to make sure they have smoke detectors and that they are in working order. "We've already made a push once during October," Thompson said. "All these deaths come with no working smoke detectors. It would have made a difference. It's senseless, and it's extremely preventable."


State Fire Marshal Butch Browning, who will speak in Monroe on Thursday, called the deaths a "tremendous loss" and encouraged citizens to donate smoke detectors to their local fire departments.

In 2005 — the most recent year in which statistics are available — Louisiana had a rate of 28.3 fire deaths per million population, averaging 16 more deaths per million than the national average, according to United States Fire Administration data.

Only the District of Columbia, Arkansas and Oklahoma had higher rates during that period.

According to the U.S. Fire Administration, fire problems vary from region to region because of climate, poverty, education, demographics and other factors.

For more information on protecting your home, business & family http://www.atechsystems.us
Atech Fire & Security



 
Posted By atechsystems

 

Fire Marshal Warns of Scam



The State Fire Marshal warns scammers are pretending to work with firefighters, to get inside people's homes. They appear to be targeting new parents.

The Fire Marshal's Office says it began with calls they received, about a man, claiming to be a state employee selling fire alarms. The Fire Marshal said, "The individual told people that he was a state employee to gain access to conduct a so-called 'inspection' of the residence."

New reports have since come in of a woman claiming she is works for an agency that provides services for the Fire Department. "She is persistent to set an appointment and indicated that she would provide window stickers for the child’s room, do a fire safety plan and give them a fire extinguisher,"

The target of the call said she had no idea how the caller found out that they have a young child. Be aware of the red flags. "All state or city fire officials conducting legitimate inspections will be in full uniform, have appropriate identification, and they do not sell fire alarms."

 
Posted By atechsystems

Exposing an invisible killer: The dangers of carbon monoxide
National Fire Protection Association (NFPA) and Underwriters Laboratories (UL) urge families to inspect, protect and detect to safeguard loved ones from the “Silent Killer”

Students from the Columbia Secondary School in NYC Joined UL’s Gus Schaefer, FDNY Chief Sal Cassano and NFPA President James Shannon at the press conference to kick off CO Awareness Week.

UL’s Gus Schaefer, FDNY Chief Sal Cassano and NFPA President James Shannon join Heather Caldwell from Kidde at the press event to kick off CO Awareness Week. According to NFPA research, fire departments respond to more than 60,000 CO incidents each year.



Bitter cold weather can bring more than just frosty mornings and runny noses. Along with the winter chill come the dangers of deadly carbon monoxide (CO), whose odorless reach extends into household living spaces as more families turn to alternative methods - such as a fireplace, wood stove or portable heater - to heat their homes and save a few dollars. A new survey*released by Underwriters Laboratories (UL), an independent product safety testing organization, revealed that while many Americans claim they have some familiarity with the dangers of CO, many others admit their knowledge is shallow, a red flag considering CO is a significant problem in the U.S., sending more than 15,000 people to the emergency room each year (according to a 2008 study by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention). The survey also revealed only half of Americans actually have a working CO alarm installed in their home and a whopping seventy-seven percent of American seniors believe CO can be easily detected by human senses.

Known as the “Silent Killer”, CO is produced by incomplete burning of fuel, such as propane, kerosene, gasoline, oil, natural gas, wood and charcoal. A CO leak can be attributed to many common household sources including malfunctioning gas-fired appliances, space heaters, chimney flues and portable generators.

Because you cannot see it, smell it or taste it, you or your loved ones could be exposed to CO without even knowing it. The symptoms – headaches, fatigue, nausea, dizziness and shortness of breath are often mistaken for the flu.

 

 


 


 
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