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Countertops like stone — but greenerECO countertops created from recycled items — including kitchen sinks! By Sandra Barrera
 An ECO countertop made from recycled material
When
it comes to countertops, most people go with natural stone for the
kitchen and bath. But Cosentino is determined to buck the trend with a
revolutionary new product. The natural stone manufacturer recently introduced ECO by
Cosentino, a sleek new countertop and surfacing material made from junk
that would otherwise have ended up in landfills. Shattered windows and
glass, broken china, old toilets and sinks and residual factory ash are
just some of the waste materials now going into the
Greenguard-certified concoction readily available. "People have this perception that for them to go green they
have to spend a lot of money or jeopardize design for sustainability,"
says Lorenzo Marquez, vice president of Cosentino.  Another ECO countertop made from recycled material "With ECO, neither of those theories apply because you're not spending more money or jeopardizing the look and feel you want."
Available
at Lowe's, ECO retails for $75 to $110 a square foot, depending on the
thickness and color - about the price of a mid-range granite, but
without the waste. "When you're mining stone, there are only a few blocks that
you can actually cut into slabs, the rest is put aside for creating
sinks, tiles and whatnot," Marquez says. "We take some of that
tremendous waste and put it back in the mountain through our
reforestation effort because we're a company that's committed to the
environment. "Then we started looking at other materials in the
surfacing industry that we could develop without having an impact on
the environment," he says. ECO made its debut in April.
The nonporous
surface, similar in performance to quartz, comes in the color
collections Green and Revive, which are available in a polished or
matte Leather Texture finish. The Green Collection is made of 75 percent post-industrial
recycled raw material. Its color ranges from white with small specks of
gray to black with large flecks of brown. The lighter the color, the more glass and porcelain in it. Darker colors are created using glass and quarried stone.
The
Revive Collection contains 75 percent post-consumer recycled raw
materials and ranges in color from white with large flecks of gray to
browns with large flecks of darker browns. To create the whites, more glass is used. The darker colors contain more glass, mirrors and industrial furnace residuals.
Marquez has the color Riverbed from the Revive Collection in his home.
"I
was lucky enough to be part of the selection process of the colors, not
that I'm a designer, but I've been around the industry long enough to
know what consumer preferences are, and this was a specific color that
I was really pushing for," he says of the color that resembles a gray
river pebble with flecks of brown. "It looks amazing." ECO does not require sealing, which makes cleaning easy
with soap and water or light surface cleaners like Windex, Lysol and
409. Of course, it isn't indestructible. So never use harsh
chemicals, place hot pans or cut directly onto the surface because the
countertop can be damaged as with most stone surfaces. "In research that we've done consumers really don't know
the difference between a quartz surface, or a granite surface and in
the future they won't know the difference between an ECO surface,"
Marquez says. "So long as it's cold and hard they consider it to be a
stone product. "But we all know how different it is."
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