Recycling gray water is neat, but what if you didn’t–literally–end up flushing it down the toilet? What if, instead, your washing machine could clean and recycle up to 95% of its own water on-the-fly?
WEBVTT MIKE: THESE ARE PROBABLY FROMTHE KITCHEN.THIS IS SOMETHING YOU DON'T SEEVERY OFTEN.YOUNG MEN INTERESTED IN DIRTYLAUNDRY.BUT IT HAS AS MUCH TO DO WITHCLEAN WATER AS IT DOES WITHCLEAN CLOTHES.>> ...
Madeline Lagattuta and Alex Merchant stand in their gutted home in Polish Hill. As they remodel, they plan to recycle gray water to use in their backyard garden. Alex Merchant and Madeline Lagattuta ...
I was never more excited to do laundry, and it wasn’t because my son and I were running out of clean underwear. I had just installed a system to divert gray water from my washing machine to my ...
The bathroom may be the place where we use the most water, but the single-use household water-guzzling champion, hands down, is the washing machine. The bad news is that a standard, top-loading washer ...