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| Students in Vermont build a WindowDresser insert. (Photo by Andrew McKeever, The Yonder ) |
The concept started in a church in Rockland, Maine, which was
losing heat due to its leaky aluminum-clad windows. Church member Richard
Cadwgan decided to build window inserts for the church windows, which he
learned about at a Midcoast Green Collaborative conference, a Maine-based
nonprofit organization. Cadwgan told McKeever the window inserts were a “win-win-win – lower heating bills, fewer carbon emissions, and greater comfort in the cold
winter months.”
After word spread to other community members, Cadwgan and former
congregation president Frank Munro took orders for 185 inserts for homes the
next year, and 1,231 inserts the year after. With so many orders, more
volunteers were needed, so “community builds” were formed. Now, there are 52
community builds throughout Maine, New Hampshire and Vermont.
Community builds allow for volunteers with no prior carpentry
experience to help build the window inserts after just a brief instruction from
their team leader, McKeever explains. Jim Salsgiver, one of the original organizers,
told McKeever, “I love the builds and getting together, meeting new people. What’s
so cool is somebody comes in and says, ‘Okay, well I signed up, but what do I
do?’ And, you know, after three hours, they’re acting like pros doing it and
excited about it and telling their friends.”
As of 2024, at least 78,600 inserts have been made, saving almost
4 million gallons of heating fuel.

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