[Greenbuilding] ENERGY STAR Clothes Dryers Program Launch

candtcampbell at juno.com candtcampbell at juno.com
Sun Jul 22 19:35:24 CDT 2012


For the same reason as David, I'd appreciate recommendations for reliable, inexpensive drying racks that attach to a wall and fold flat against that wall when not in use.

Tim

Message: 15
Date: Sun, 22 Jul 2012 11:50:35 -0400
From: David Bergman <bergman at cyberg.com>
To: Green Building <greenbuilding at lists.bioenergylists.org>
Subject: Re: [Greenbuilding] ENERGY STAR Clothes Dryers Program Launch
Message-ID: <FF.B1.02978.E232C005 at hrndva-omtalb.mail.rr.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"; Format="flowed"

The tinyurl's aren't working for some reason. But the problem here -- 
and I would guess for many others in apartments -- is one of space 
and, secondarily, aesthetics. We use racks and furniture and barely 
have room to dry handwash. Could never fit regular wash with sheets, 
towels, etc.

I wish we had the old solution, which was a pole placed in the back 
yard of the building so that all the rear facing apt's could attach 
clotheslines from their windows to the pole. And that, of course, 
wouldn't work with high rises.

David

At 11:17 PM 7/21/2012, Bob Waldrop wrote:
>Indoor drying products/resources --
>
>Home Despot $79 retractable clothes line, 
><http://tinyurl.com/cjkbpxa>http://tinyurl.com/cjkbpxa
>
>Walmart Clothes drying racks -- 
><http://tinyurl.com/bmsqb5q>http://tinyurl.com/bmsqb5q
>
>http://frugalliving.about.com/od/clothingcare/ht/How-To-Line-Dry-Clothes-Inside.htm
>
>Bob Waldrop, in sunny 109 degree F Oklahoma, where clothes dry 
>really quickly on the line





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