Program areas at Habitable
Habitable currently has programs in three areas: innovative research; powerful data tools; and capacity-building education. 1.innovative research Habitable publishes innovative, actionable research that advances human and environmental health. For example, kaiser permanente cited Habitable's research as the driver for its decision to prohibit the use of antimicrobial additives in its building product specification, and the home depot relied upon Habitable's research to adopt a hazard avoidance chemical strategy that signals fundamental, permanent and systemic improvement in the building products industry, and is a strong step towards health equity in building products. In addition, our influential electronic publications reach thousands of healthy building professionals, scientists, researchers and others interested in decreasing chemicals of concern and are key resources for opinion leaders in the field. As a thought leader, Habitable focuses on market trends and policy issues that impact the green building community and other product markets that support a circular economy. In communicating our latest research findings we are often the first to raise new issues of concern that cross-cut sectors, like issues related to plastics, embodied carbon, and climate change. 2.powerful data tools Habitable offers data tools designed to increase knowledge, promote transparency and inspire safer chemistry and product innovation. It is currently difficult to identify healthier building materials and other types of products because product ingredients are not typically or reliably disclosed by industry. Habitable is an acknowledged leader in advancing the disclosure of the contents and related health hazards in commonly used building products, and we are advancing resources in other sectors. Our data tools include: pharos: the most comprehensive independent database of chemicals, polymers, metals, and other substances - currently over 200,000 chemicals and growing. It is used across sectors, including the built environment, electronics, food packaging, beauty and personal care, and many other consumer products. Using dozens of scientific lists for specific human and environmental health hazards, it aggregates a vast array of information used for analyzing chemicals of concern. The tool also provides a wealth of information on certifications and standards used to measure the health impacts of chemicals and materials, including voc content and emissions, recycled and biobased content, and much more. Informed: leveraging our deep research and common product methodology Habitable is able to screen product types (i.e., flooring, insulation, paint, etc.) Where transparency from manufacturers is incomplete or simply does not exist. Leveraging this methodology Habitable is able to classify the product types into a red to green (worst to best) ranking. Access to these product rankings is provided through our informed application, resources, and consulting services. Chemforward: fiscally sponsored by Habitable, the program's mission is to be the most-trusted source for actionable chemical hazard information that empowers suppliers, manufacturers and brands across all sectors to create products that are safe for people and the environment. The mission will be realized by collaborating with the value chain to provide cost-efficient access to verified, actionable chemical hazard information and thereby enable better chemistry in product design and manufacturing. In the landscape of material-health and safer chemistry initiatives, chemforward supports organizations developing chemical guidelines (retailers, brands, ngos, certifiers) that provide trusted evidence-base safer products. Sum decelerator: fiscally sponsored by Habitable, the program's goal is to educate the food industry on the impact of single use packaging and to reduce or eliminate their common use to improve both health and the environmental well-being. The safer chemistry impact fund (scif) advances science-based, data-driven solutions to systematically eliminate hazardous chemicals and replace them with verified safe alternatives. Scif empowers the supply chain with the infrastructure, tools, and guidance needed to successfully navigate the transition to safer chemistry. 3.capacity-building education Habitable's primary community of practice and education program is a national initiative supporting affordable housing leaders who are improving human health by using less toxic building materials. Our participants have access to online resource providing critical information to the affordable housing community, as well as networking with peers in the communities of practice, spotlighting on-the ground demonstration projects across the country. The program is enabling those who develop, own and operate affordable housing to work at the forefront of healthy building practice by adapting our leading-edge research and decision-making technology to the unique needs and opportunities in this market. Little things matter (ltm) is fiscally sponsored by Habitable. The program's primary goal is to inform people about the impact of toxic chemicals on their health, with a particular focus on children and disease prevention. Ltm's unique approach involves creating videos and other content to explain complex environmental health topics in a way that is accessible to the general public.