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This Mint goes green

Dentist’s office hopes to mix pearly whites with platinum LEED rating

(news photo)

JIM CLARK / PAMPLIN MEDIA GROUP

Hygienist Kellie Kewi cleans the teeth of patient Troy Witt at Mint Dental Works, which prides itself on its environmentally friendly practices.

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The first thing you notice at Mint Dental Works is what’s missing: the smell.

A state-of-the-art ventilation system at Mint eliminates medicinal odors, which can cause anxiety in some patients.

The system also is one component of the new office’s environmentally friendly approach to the design and operation of a dental practice.

Dr. Jason McMillan, a graduate of the University of Oregon and Oregon Health & Science University’s dental school, says you can’t separate your health as an individual from the health of the environment.

When he and his wife, Rebecca, who co-owns the practice, began work on a new location, in a former grocery store on Southeast Morrison Street, they wanted to tend to both.

The end result is a dental office that stands to be the nation’s first to be certified under LEED, the Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design standards for green building. (The McMillans’ application is being processed; they are expecting a platinum rating, the highest one available.)

Entering the office, a visitor will notice the high ceilings, exposed wood beams, and a cool green color palette. The McMillans used as much salvaged material as possible in designing the interior of the space, finding and refurbishing doors and decorative accents from the ReBuilding Center, Craigslist.org and Aurora Mills Architectural Salvage in Aurora.

They had the specialized cabinetry, with storage for various dental tools and supplies, custom-made from Skyblend, a recycled particle board produced by Dillard-based Roseburg Forest Products.

The material has none of the fume-producing urea-formaldehyde that often is added to such wood, and so it contributes to the clean air enjoyed by staff and patients alike.

A round table in a private consultation area, Rebecca McMillan says, is made from a piece of flooring salvaged from the nearby Grand Central Bowl, the site of one of the couple’s first dates.

Saving water is key to the green checkup. As the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends for the health care environment, the McMillans use alcohol rub instead of soap and water for handwashing — no sinks in the examination rooms.



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