Courtesy of Inhabit
DCL
You can call Inhabitat many things?trend spotting sustainable design apostles, diehard green gear hounds, or chroniclers of the cutting edge in the modern environmental movement. Just don't call them a green design blog.
It's right there, loud and clear, on Inhabitat's mission statement: Good design is green design. Green design is good design. After you log off, that should be the message that lingers in your bleary, LCD strained eyes: good design is inherently green, because it's sustainable.
Apparently the New York Times didn't get the memo—they call the site a green design blog two sentences into its profile on Inhabitat's founder Jill Fehrenbacher—but hey, the name does make sense.
Inhabitat began as a humble forum in 2005, and has grown over a few short years to feature a stable of over twenty writers and editors. And every day they churn out breaking news on the latest developments in the sustainable design world, and feature reviews and editorials on green products.
Some recent highlights—a piece on a desk made from a recycled airplane wing, a photo-rich post on the architectural wonder Casa de Los Pinos, and a look into Apple's claim that the new Macbook is the greenest laptop ever made.
Aside from the constantly updated blogroll, Inhabitat also features an online store, green gift guides, and a series of videos from the Greener Gadgets Conference?an annual event also founded by Fehrenbacher.
So head over to Inhabitat and plug into the ever-evolving world of sustainable design.
