When one thinks of plumbing installations in Glendale, it often amounts to the basics: a new sink, the gleaming shower head upgrade, or even the not-so-glam toilet swap. Yet, there is a vast underground world—quite literally—of pipes and fittings that make these everyday luxuries possible. Whether you're dreaming of a kitchen with modern plumbing, or a perfect rain shower in your bathroom, understanding the type you need depends on a whole host of things. It closely ties to your home's specific quirks: its age, the layout of the water piping, and even personal style. That all becomes immeasurably more complicated if you're renovating an older home. The pipes
Picture a large family where everyone demands (and deserves) their hot water each morning, from the grandparent who needs a special interact shower (that's not too hot, not too cold, just the right temps for grandma) to the half-dozen kids and the two adults who need several types of 'interacts' (minute to win it, loud enough for the kids to hear, kind of hot, cold - or in between - deal) on their way to back-to-back showers. Picture that family in your house with "plumbing" replaced by the term "mobile, eco-friendly, efficient plumbing installation." And then consider: You don't have to be that family or live in that scene. But if you have better-ish and worse-when-it-counts plumbing, you might be headed toward that kind of family scenario.
Water conservation is increasingly on the minds of Glendale residents, and in this, we find our directorial focus of Towhee Capital. We're going to start small and at the personal level because this isn't just some drab thing that tends to our plumbing; it's a way of expressing one's environmental ethos. Choices made in the installations or uses of the personal water systems can express that. From rainwater harvesting systems to gray water recycling, and everything else mindful, we hope these practices somehow weave their way into the average Glendale individual's consciousness. Because remember, the green revolution can be a pretty satisfying thing. Being a wise conservationist can pay off. And we're not just talking about lower water bills, which is a real concern and a wonderful potential outcome. We're also winking at the idea that a "good green" can be part of a "good clean."