Entries Tagged as 'Green Spa'

Blu Water Day Spa - Eco Friendly Spa In Bethesda

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Blu Water Day Spa Featured in Bethesda Magazine

Blu Water Day Spa, a full service and eco-friendly day spa, is gaining local popularity as it was recently featured in Bethesda Magazine.

Blu Water Day Spa, a full service, eco-friendly day spa was recently featured in Bethesda Magazine. The bi-monthly magazine reaches those living in the Bethesda area and provides information on dining, real estate, entertainment, home design and décor, community issues, art and people.

The article titled “Women in Business” profiles Julie Nguyen, the CEO of Blu Water Day Spa. The profile explains how Nguyen got into the industry and provides information on

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Fundamentals for Green Spas - Enviromental Sensitivity

 

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This article is brought to you by Spavelous.com.   http://www.spavelous.com

UC Irvine Offers New Course, “Fundamentals for Green Spas”

Course Supports Spa Industry in Developing Environmentally Sensitive Business Practices

University of California, Irvine Extension, the pioneer of the first “Spa and Hospitality Management” certificate program on the West Coast, and the first and only fully-online certificate program of its kind in the United States, offers a new elective course, “Fundamentals for Green Spas.” The course will support [Read more →]

Fresh & fruit using eco-friendly exfoliation products at spas

 

After Laura Noss signed up to receive a weekly organic produce box from a farm near her home in Menlo Park, Calif., she decided that fruits and vegetables grown close to home taste better.

“It has opened my eyes to what is local and seasonal,” Ms. Noss said. “I now understand that what I put in my body and on my body matters.”

So she began looking for ways to go local beyond the palate. Last year, while she planned a getaway to Maui, she hunted for treatments that used indigenous ingredients at the Grand Wailea Resort Hotel and Spa. That is how she found herself being scrubbed with locally-sourced coconut and sugar, then dunked in just-harvested coconut milk — for $160 a treatment.

“It felt like it would be fresher than some of the other treatments,” said Ms. Noss, 38, the founder of Social Planets, a communications and marketing company. “I envisioned the woman going out to the tree and plucking my coconut.”

More than 28 percent of spas nationwide use local ingredients, according to a 2007 survey by the International Spa Association, a trade group for the industry. Last year, after seeing the trend take off, the association started tracking how many of the 3,000 spas in its membership use ingredients from local nature in treatments.

In an age of global warming and high gas prices, is it any wonder that more spa-goers are gravitating to blueberries, honey and even maple syrup, cultivated close by because they believe it leaves a lighter carbon footprint?

The local-food movement, popularized by writers like Michael Pollan and Barbara Kingsolver, has created an aura of authenticity around all things local. Forward-thinking spas have long included indigenous ingredients on their menus, but more spa owners have entered the game of late, now that customers will pay more for services they deem environmentally responsible.

Some spas use the local produce in unexpected ways. The Cliff House Resort and Spa in Ogunquit, Me., offers its guests a Maine blueberry body wrap for $110. You can also get a Maine Blueberry Pedicure.

That more businesses (spas included) are rushing to make greenbacks off the green-minded hasn’t escaped the notice of Jessica Jensen, a founder of Low Impact Living, an online resource that helps consumers live eco-friendly.

“There are two kinds of companies,” Ms. Jensen said, “ones that are genuinely dedicated to these issues and incorporate them into every aspect of their business, and then other companies trying to put a varnish on their business in the form of putting a few green techniques here and there.”

Some critics say that marketing — not any environmental impulse per se — is the reason local ingredients are touted at spas from the Napa Valley to the Maine Coast.

“Putting the label ‘organic’ or ‘local’ on a product allows a vendor to charge more, irregardless of supply and demand,” said James E. McWilliams, the author of “A Revolution in Eating: How the Quest for Food Shaped America.” “There is a psychological factor at work here as well. When a company can claim they are going local, it conveys a sense of virtue, that what they are doing is natural and pure, and that their behavior is alternative and even elite. These are values that a lot of consumers today crave.”

Heather Stephenson, 34, favors buying local wherever she travels, as well as in San Francisco, her base. “One of the best things you can do in terms of the planet is to seek out things that are sourced close to home,” said Ms. Stephenson, a founder of Ideal Bite, a Web site about ways to go green. Her body has been polished from regional grape seeds at Fairmont Sonoma Mission Inn and Spa in California, exfoliated with Javanese coffee in Bali, and massaged with volcanic rocks from Costa Rica.

Some green advocates question whether such destination-spa treatments, however carefully sourced, are eco-friendly at all. “Using local materials in a spa setting is a great idea,” said Ms. Jensen of Low Impact Living. “But it’s kind of silly when you think about the carbon emissions associated with people flying 3,000 miles to get to the spa, versus the supposed savings using local materials, wraps and lotion.”

Ms. Stephenson, who visits roughly five spas a year, doesn’t see a contradiction. “The fact is that people go on a vacation,” she said. “We can do that in a way that gives us a healthy experience for ourselves, but also wakes us up to experiencing the things that that culture provides, and gives us an appreciation for the natural world.”

Home-grown experiences are part of what destination spas sell. The spa at Stoweflake Mountain Resort in Stowe, Vt., offers a Vermont Maple Sugar Body Polish using local maple syrup. Tell a tale of a land or its people, and patrons will come — many spas hope.

Sometimes a marketable idea is discovered where it’s least expected. During construction at the Sundara Inn and Spa in Wisconsin Dells, Wis., the former owner, Kelli Trumble, lamented how she had sand in everything, said Tara Duarte, the director of operations at Sundara, including “every pair of shoes and boots and all over her car.”

“Yet, the sand was a pretty mix of reds and golds,” Ms. Duarte added, “and it had such an even consistency that she thought it was the sort of thing you’d find in body polishes.”

So Ms. Trumble put some sandstone into a baggie and had it analyzed at a lab. When it turned out to be sandstone of an ancient Cambrian variety, Sandstone Body Polishes soon appeared at the spa.

Designing signature services based around local ingredients sets spas apart from the competition, said Melinda Taschetta-Millane, the editor in chief of Skin Inc. magazine, a trade publication for spa professionals. “They find that if they use one of these indigenous ingredients, it helps their identity and gives their spa a distinctive mark.”

Competition is fierce with roughly 14,615 spas nationwide, up from 10,128 in 2004, according to the spa association.

As a result, spas are concocting increasingly offbeat (some might say outlandish) offerings, looking to nearby vineyards, deserts and rock formations for ingredients to slather, spritz and rub onto willing bodies.

ESSpa Kozmetika, a spa near downtown Pittsburgh, doles out hot chocolate, brownies and dark-chocolate samples in the waiting room to draw attention to its $140 Stimulating Hot Cocoa Facial and $140 Hot Chocolate Body Wrap. (What the spa doesn’t advertise is that although it gets its chocolate from a local ice cream shop, the cocoa beans are from Africa.)

Customers who choose the Rosemary and Grape Seed Foot Scrub at the spa at Auberge du Soleil in Napa Valley are greeted with a glass of 2002 Barlow merlot and tasting notes: “The balanced fruit with subtle earth and herbal notes in the merlot are wonderfully brought to life by the complementary aromatics of grape seeds and rosemary in the foot treatment.”

Spa-goers shouldn’t assume that locals have traditionally given themselves facials or wrapped their limbs in, say, a blueberry mash just because a treatment’s star ingredient is indigenous. “The Hawaiians didn’t really do a papaya scrub, although you do have papaya in Hawaii,” said Sylvia Sepielli, the owner of Sylvia Planning and Design, a spa design and consulting firm in Sedona, Ariz. In her opinion, spas that try to connect their treatments to “local healing culture” are misleading.

It is possible that discovering local ingredients at a spa will have an impact on a person’s behavior once they return home, Mr. McWilliams said.

“Maybe ‘green lite’ will turn into ‘green heavy,’ ” he said. “But the most environmentally-friendly thing we can do is reduce our consumer spending dramatically, and a spa is a dramatic luxury expense.”

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San Francisco Opens First Green Medical Spa in the USA

 

This article is brought to you by Spavelous.com.

Nation’s First Green Medical Spa Opens in San Francisco

The iconic Epi Center MedSpa celebrates its 10th anniversary today with the opening of the country’s first Eco-MedSpa in San Francisco in a completely renovated facility in the historic Union Square medical building at 450 Sutter Street.

The new facility is LEED certified and built entirely with sustainable materials, from recycled and FSC-certified wood, marble flooring and countertops, to the eco-paints and recycled fabrics.

The Eco-MedSpa is also energy efficient and conserves resources through its lighting, recycling, electronic medical charting, digital photography and water filters that eliminate the need for bottled water.

In explaining her decision to open the Eco-MedSpa, EpiCenter President and Co-founder Margaret Mitchell said, “to be first in something is not always the popular choice due to he risk of failure or fear of the unexpected.”

“Still, we have learned by being the first MedSpa, the first to introduce the PhotoFacial treatment, and first to perform laser hair removal in San Francisco with light that what seems only to be a dream becomes a reality the moment you begin working to make it happen,” Mitchell said.

To achieve a sustainable yet stylish construction the Epi Center MedSpa worked with some of the country’s foremost leaders in green building and design.

Eric Corey Freed, founder of organicArchitect and author of Green Building and Remodeling for Dummies, ensured the Epi Center MedSpa conformed to the strict standards established by the U.S. Green Building Council.

“The dedication of Epi Center MedSpa founder and owner Margaret Mitchell to this project, ensuring that every aspect of the new Eco-MedSpa is green for the right reasons, has been inspirational to me and made this project an exciting one,” Freed said.

The space was designed by Justin Martinkovic, principal in the San Francisco-based architecture firm MartinkovicMilford. Will Wick of the Wick Design Group designed the interior.

Eco-Fabulous founder and style guru Zem Joaquin served as the “green fashion police” for the project, ensuring that its design adhered to architect and designer William McDonough’s strict “Cradle to Cradle” standards. Cradle-to-Cradle requires that as many aspects as possible are designed to be in line with natural systems to create a building that allows nature and commerce to co-exist in a way that supports the well-being of the planet.

Epi Center’s Eco-MedSpa will also feature a revamped menu of services that include organic treatments and new procedures that minimize waste and the disposal of toxins into the environment.

Their new, state-of-the-art microdermabrasion technique is crystal free, unlike the aluminum oxide crystals used in most spas today while still providing an effective treatment with long-lasting results.

The MedSpa’s signature procedure, the Photofacial SM Elite, continues to be a leader in non-toxic skin rejuvenation.

The physician-led Epi Center Eco-MedSpa is also partnering with well-known San Francisco skin care company Juice Beauty to develop the first line of organic medical grade skin care products.

Traditional medical spa treatments will also remain on the menu, balanced by organic products and a sustainable construction and practices.

“The entire Epi Center MedSpa will be green,” says Joaquin. “You don’t have to sacrifice style to be eco-fabulous. We certainly didn’t in this case, where everything from the aesthetics to the products and services are offered in a beautiful, safe and healthy environment.”

About the Epi Center MedSpa

The Epi Center MedSpa was co-founded in San Francisco in 1998 by Margaret Mitchell and world-renown dermatologist and PhotoFacial developer Dr. Patrick Bitter Sr., MD. It was the first medical spa of its kind to open in the United States, and continues to uphold its reputation as a skin rejuvenation industry leader and top provider of aesthetic skincare and hair removal. The MedSpa is overseen by San Francisco plastic surgeon Dr. Scott Mosser and dermatologist Dr. Patrick Bitter Sr. to ensure the safety and medical quality of all treatments offered.

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Recess - Take a break from Chemical Nail Services

 

 

Looking for a spot where you won’t have to choke on toxic chems just to maintain that mani-pedi? Check out the recently opened recess, that does more than toe the line.

Airy and sweet, this 2,000-square-foot nail palace is eco-chic. and not just from the LA girls looking to fix chipped color. recess earned top marks from leadership in energy and environmental design (LEED). going green means this shop smells clean. hoof it to the beauty bar to customize your treatment with formaldehyde and paraben-free soufflé lotions and aromatherapy soaks. choose from a heavenly array of scents such as blooming rose, summer guava and indian spice. put your foot down and add a salt/sugar scrub or clay mask. fancy yourself a germaphobe?

Technicians employ the finest medical grade sanitation equipment for utensils. every client receives a new set of files, buffers and toe separators. the towels are made from an anti-microbial bamboo and cotton blend, and pedicure basin liners are used only once for each foot treatment.

Admit it. Your nails never looked so buff.

recess

8408-B beverly boulevard

between croft and orlando

323.782.9919

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ISPA. Predicts 2008 Trends

 

The International SPA Association on Jan. 11 issued their Spa Industry Trend Watch for 2008, saying that the as the spa industry has become engrained into everyday culture, many spa trends have extended their stay and moved into full-blown tradition.

 

“Savvy spa-goers are shaping the trends. Spa professionals want to create the best experience possible, so it’s a ‘buyers’ market’ for consumers who express their wants and needs,” said ISPA President Lynne McNees. “The spa lifestyle is in fashion, though it’s also timeless. As a leading leisure industry, spas have the staying power similar to that of cruise lines, skiing and golf.”

 

Compiled through comprehensive research and daily communication with a vast network of more than 3,000 members in 75 countries, ISPA releases the following Spa Industry Trend Watch:

 

* Plenty of Cooks in the Kitchen—You’d be hard-pressed to find a better combination than spa treatments and delicious, healthy food. In fact, 19 percent of U.S. spas offer cooking experiences running the gamut from week-long schools with celebrity chefs to private lessons with tips on taking the healthy cooking experience home.

 

* Spa Lifestyles Equal Healthy Lifestyles—Eating nutritious food, exercising and relieving stress are critical in leading a healthy lifestyle, and spas are championing this effort by teaching these basic principles. In fact, 51 percent of U.S. spas offer educational programs and nutritional consultations, 40 percent offer healthy eating classes, 26 percent have educational offerings on obesity or weight gain issues and 17 percent offer exercise programs for children and teens.

 

* The Next Generation of Spa-goer —Nearly 4 million teenagers have been to a spa where they learn how to deal with stress, eat nutritiously and care for their skin. With 16 percent of spas offering teen programs, 34 percent offering teen packages and 17 percent offering packages for children, Millennials will never have to worry about a bad MySpace picture.

 

* Corporate Wellness—Google was selected as Fortune’s No. 1 company to work for in 2007. Google is also a member of ISPA and offers on-site massages to its employees. According to the American Journal of Health Promotions, for every $1 spent on wellness programs, employers can expect a return of up to $10 through lower medical claims, reduced absenteeism, improved productivity and other factors. “A spa experience is the perfect way for employers to show their team that they care about their health and well-being,” added McNees.

 

* High Touch and High Tech—In our constantly-connected society, in order for some people to take a time out, they still need to be plugged in. Spas are incorporating technology such as Wi-Fi in relaxation rooms, cyber treatments that combine biofeedback technology with guidance from wellness professionals and light therapy to help those suffering from depression, Seasonal Affective Disorder and insomnia.

 

* Customized Relaxation—You can make almost anything your “own” today from custom workouts built into your Nikes, fragrances blended to suit your nose or a zenned-out playlist on your iPod. Spas are creating unique experiences for their guests as well, with 24 percent indicating that clients can book blocks of time instead of specific services. This time block allows them to create a treatment that is all their own from the music to the products to the room temperature.

 

* Luxury Brands Opening Luxury Spas—Brands that are known for their chic designs are opening over-the-top spas around the world. Some of the well-known brands include the first Armani-branded spa in Tokyo, Versace Group’s spa at its Australian resort, spas at Bulgari’s hotels in Milan and Bali, and Prada Beauty’s line exclusively at Ritz-Carlton properties.

 

* Greening Grows—As 76 percent of U.S. spas apply environmentally sustainable practices, the spa community’s commitment to the environment is not a passing phase. On-site organic gardens; products made from locally-grown fruits, vegetables, herbs and plants; mineral makeup; and green building tactics are just a few of the ways that spa professionals are showing their commitment to the earth.

 

Full Article

Spa Product Trends for 2008

 

Spa Business / Spa Press Releases / Spa Marketing

 

Organics

 

Organic ingredients, products and treatments are more and more becoming the norm, with offerings such as vegan manicure and pedicures and indigenous-ingredient body treatments popping up in many facilities nationwide. Green spa design, which includes the incorporation of recyclable building materials and systems that conserve water and energy, also has become a hot trend. The Green Spa Network, is one organization that is working to develop and help businesses implement more environmentally friendly practices, including how to sustain staff and business resources.

Blue the new Green?

 

Blue will replace green as the environmental movement’s color. Climate change has quickly become the driver of environmentalism and people worldwide understand that climate is all about the seas and the sky - both blue. Watch for green to become a subset of blue which is coming to denote the much larger emerging spirit of good-citizen ethics.

 

Nutriceuticals

 

Beauty beverages, nutriceuticals, gourmet skincare are all sharing common ingredients. The boundary between what we put on and in our bodies to look beautiful has clearly blurred.

Read the full article on Spa Product Trends for 2008

 

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Spa Treatment Trends 2008

 

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See the future look to the past:

 
This article is brought to you by Spavelous.com.

We’ve all heard about potentially harmful chemical anti-ageing agents that can be absorbed through the skin. Now, the tide has turned to natural, earthy treatments that have been tried and tested by women over centuries. Spas will continue to look at Japanese and Ayurvedic beauty products which focus on anti-ageing and sun damage.

 

Japanese cosmetic giant Shiseido, and SK-11 have all introduced skin lightening ranges to the West. The SK-11 range, an international bestseller and current favorite of Kate Moss and Sadie Frost, is based on skin lightening ingredient Pitera derived from Sake. Its anti-ageing effects were discovered in the eternally youthful hands of monks distilling rice wine at a Kobe monastery

 

This year we have seen several of these ancient rituals and treatments in the press. There will be an increase in the demand for these spa treatments; more spas will be introducing these services this year.

Read Full Article on Spa Treatment Trends 2008

 

Spa Business / Spa Press Releases / Spa Marketing

For manicures, green is the new pink

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Susan Kim, who worked for 17 years as a manicurist, complains of chronic itchiness in her eyes, an allergic reaction to the fumes and dust she inhaled in her workplace. Another former manicurist, Linda Chen, used to have a bumpy red rash on her face and neck. It finally faded after she quit the job.

 

As nail workers nationwide experience ailments they assert are caused by the tools of their trade, concerned community groups and health advocates are trying to strengthen regulations on nail-care products and help promote “greener” nail shops.

 

Entrepreneurs are in on it too. Former model Kim D’Amato opened the Priti Organic Spa in New York City in 2005 after she stopped getting manicures and pedicures while she was pregnant, fearing that the chemicals used could harm her unborn child.

 

D’Amato’s salon is just one of several around the country committed to offering nontoxic products in eco-friendly environments. The Nova Nail Spa, which opened in San Francisco in August, incorporated recycled materials and energy-efficient lighting in its design. So did Recess, which is slated to open in late October in West Hollywood, Calif.

 

While green salons are great for customers, they offer as many, or more, health benefits to their employees. These technicians often work long hours and thus risk greater exposure to dangerous products. In June, the Environmental Protection Agency granted $100,000 to two Seattle nonprofit groups to launch the Toxic Beauty Project. It’s the latest of several EPA initiatives aimed at helping salons reduce toxic exposure and improve ventilation.

 

“Nail workers tend to work and live in these stores,” said Kevin Burrell, executive director of one of the groups, the Environmental Coalition of South Seattle. She added that her group wants to make sure the workers and their clients “understand the ramifications of the health risks.”

 

The most problematic ingredients in nail products include formaldehyde, dibutyl phthalate (DBP) and toluene. (Comprehensive information on nail products and their ingredients can be found on the Skin Deep Web site, cosmeticsdatabase.com, sponsored by the Environmental Working Group. It rates cosmetics and personal-care products and outlines the potential hazards associated with the ingredients.)

 

In 2005, California passed the Safe Cosmetics Act, which requires manufacturers to disclose ingredients in their products that are on state or federal lists of chemicals known to cause cancer and birth defects. Formaldehyde, DBP and toluene are among the chemicals that must be reported.

 

DBP was one of many cosmetic ingredients banned in the European Union in 2004, and several consumer-safety groups have urged U.S. authorities to follow suit. Currently, the Consumer Product Safety Commission does not regulate nail-care products, which are also not generally subject to premarket approval by the Food and Drug Administration.

 

Several U.S. manufacturers have since changed their nail products, including OPI Products Inc., which removed DBP and toluene from its nail lacquers. OPI’s chief operating officer, Eric Schwartz, said he hoped the company can lead the way and change industry practices. “It wasn’t easy to find replacements that can create the same breadth of colors,” he said, “but we want something positive, and people appreciate that.”

 

Improving the products is important. So is improving the quality of air circulation in nail salons. According to Dr. George Friedman-Jimenez, director of the NYU/Bellevue Occupational and Environmental Medicine Clinic, better ventilation could prevent most of the health problems associated with exposure to nail products. At Nova Nail Spa in San Francisco, a ventilation system installed in the ceiling helps keep the air fresh. “We don’t have any more paint-shop smell,” said owner Donald Kim.

 

Kim has, however, noticed a drawback to using nontoxic nail polishes: fewer color choices. “Things can’t change overnight,” he said, “but we can see improvements if consumers and salon owners start to demand and pressure the manufacturers to upgrade their products.”

 

Nova and other green salons, including Recess and Priti, have opted to forgo one traditional salon staple: artificial nails. “Having done all the research, I realize that doing acrylic is almost a step from using antifreeze,” said Nidhi Lal, owner of Recess.

 

No one at the Priti spa seems to mind that biodegradable slippers are favored over artificial nails. With fragrant incense lingering in the air, men and women lounge on handcrafted bamboo furniture in Priti’s cozy parlor, which has sage-green walls.

 

As owner D’Amato intended, the salon is a place that attracts pregnant women — as clients and as staff. Customer Aarona Pichinson reads a magazine, while technician Marisol Martinez, a mom-to-be, offers her a muscle-relaxing pedicure using products made from natural ingredients. Meanwhile, patron Jessica Berger Gross, her pregnant belly protruding, receives her regular manicure with Priti’s own brand of acetone-free, soy-based polish remover. None of the women seem to worry that working in the salon or enjoying its services would endanger their own health or that of their gestating children.

 

For D’Amato, that’s a success. “I don’t want pregnant women to face the same dilemma, feeling guilty getting their nails done,” she said.

 

Full Article

 

Priti Day Spa / Day Spa Safety / Green Nail Spa