Designing a Sustainable (Green) Stone
Floor Maintenance Program
By Frederick M.
Hueston
Fortunately there is an effective way to not only maintain these surfaces but also to keep them looking new. The following guideline will show you how to develop a sustainable maintenance program. This is especially important for schools, hospitals and other buildings were children and people sensitive to these harmful chemicals are present everyday.
- Green Seal Report
Floor Care Products: Finishes and Strippers
www.greenseal.org/resources/reports/CGR_floorcare.pdf
-Safe and Effective Use of Floor Finish Strippers
Janitorial Products. Pollution Prevention Project
Sponsored by US EPA
www.wrppn.org/janitorial/factsheet/floor.htm
-Health
Hazard Evaluation Report 95-0313-2589,
-NIOSH
[1990]. NIOSH criteria for a
recommended
standard: occupational exposure to
ethylene
glycol monobutyl ether and ethylene
glycol
monobutyl ether acetate.
Public
Health Service, Centers for Disease
Control,
National Institute for Occupational
Safety and
Health, DHHS (NIOSH) Publication
No. 90–118.
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[1986]. Odor thresholds and irritation
levels of
several chemical substances: a review.
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WHO [1983].
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Program Guidelines
Step 6. Cleaning
All stone is taken from the earth
in a raw block form. This block is cut
into slices that we call slabs. The
slabs are then cut further to a smaller size such as a tile or countertop. It is then polished using a series of
abrasive materials. The mechanics are
relatively simple. A piece of stone is
rubbed with a series of abrasives starting with a course grit size followed by
Finer and finer grit sizes. The scratch pattern left behind from one grit
is removed by the next grit creating finer and finer scratches. This process is continued until the scratch
pattern becomes microscopic. The process
is similar to refinishing a piece of wood, starting with a course sandpaper and
ending with a fine sandpaper. The shine
is placed on the stone by continuing this abrading process using very fine
powders. With sustainable(Green) restoration methods no chemicals are used.
Restoration
Periodically the stone will need to be restored. Perhaps you have not followed a proper maintenance program or the type of stone you have is not suited to the conditions it receives or for what ever other reason it is not responding to maintenance, then restoration is required. How often this will need to be done is difficult to determine. Generally if all the precautions above are followed, restoration may only be needed as often as once per year or as little as once every five years or so. The restoration process re-hones the stone to remove deep scratches and is then re-polished. Do not attempt the re-honing process yourself, this requires a great degree of skill and experience, please call a reputable restoration company who specializes in sustainable methods for this task.
Natural stone was the first
building material used by man. Its care
and maintenance is one of the oldest tasks performed by our ancestors and was
maintained without any of today’s modern chemical products. The above guidelines were developed by our
years of experience with this beautiful material and with the addition of sustainable
practices will provide many years of beauty.
Written by
Frederick M. Hueston,
Stone Forensics
E-Mail: Fhueston@stoneforensics.com
Web Site: www.stoneforensics.com
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