Greening Up My Replacement Window Company
Over the past year or so I’ve looked into several ways of “greening up” my company. Most of our changes so far have been in the office area and now we our focusing on the production side. As I find more ways to make my own company green I will share them so others can learn from our experiences.
Since we install doors and windows, we use a ton of caulking each year. With exterior caulking comes the need for a place to wipe off the extra caulking and rags to clean up any mess that we make. In the past we have tried the heavy duty paper towels and they tend to rip. We have also tried the cheap hand towels and shop rags that they sell at the home centers without any luck. Last year we switched over to recycled tee-shirts which we purchased from The Paint Store.
Another major change for us was switching over to an environmentally safe, low VOC caulking. Each replacement window that we install requires between 1/3-1/2 of a tube of caulking so over the course of a year it adds up. Now our challenge is to find a way to recycle all of our empty caulking tubes. One of the major rewards of switching over our caulking came from a price reduction, our cost went from $4.33 a tube down to $2.98 a tube! Going green and saving green ($$$) is real bonus. Our new caulking vendor is www.windowcomponent.com
Caulking Specs:
- AAMA Certified
- Non-Yellowing
- Environmentally friendly
- No Solvents, Very Low VOCs
- Can Be Painted in 2 hours
- Fast Cure at a wide range of temperatures
- Aggressive Adhesion to common construction substrates
- Compatible with SBS Flashing
- Available in over 60 colors


Glad to hear that you’ve switched to an environmentally safe caulking when you are installing your products. I was just wondering if you installing any types of windows that help to lesson heating and cooling costs of your customers. I work in an elementary school that is a certified “green building”. I know that all of our windows are designed to collect sunlight in the winter months to help heat the building and then they have a tint to them to help cool the rooms in the warmer months. This really seems to keep the school’s heating/cooling much lower than other buildings in our district.
All of the windows that we install use Low E coatings, our triple pane windows use Low E film on two surfaces.