Showing posts with label Green Construction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Green Construction. Show all posts

6.18.2013

Tiny Green Houses

5 Tiny Houses With Big Green Ideas


It used to be that the sign of living well was a big house, one with lots of rooms, maybe a pool—the kind of house you might envy when you catch a glimpse of it on TV or in a magazine. But that’s changing. Due to environmental and economic pressures, builders and buyers alike are beginning to think smaller and smaller and look to more sustainable technologies and materials for homes.
This movement, known as the “tiny house movement,” is a direct response to the growing concern about environmental impact, carbon footprints, financial challenges and concerns about space and land conservation. There’s also a sense of freedom that many tiny-house dwellers talk about. Many of these houses are modular, and that means they can be packed up, shipped out and then plopped down anywhere the residents desire (within zoning limitations, of course). They can even be placed on rooftops, which means they utilize the otherwise unused space on urban skylines. The houses are also very inexpensive, which means owners seldom have to be concerned with a mortgage. This gallery showcases five little houses with pretty big eco-conscious features. Simply click a photo to learn more. Oh, and did we mention how cute they are?

6.16.2013

This Old (green) House


austin
  • As Posted On www.thisoldhouse.com
    The architecture may be old at This Old House's new project in Austin, Texas, but the thinking is thoroughly modern. For the first time, the show is going totally "green"—using as many environmentally friendly building products and methods as possible—and creating a functional home for a contemporary blended family.

    The subject of the renovation is a 1926 Craftsman bungalow that owners Michael Klug, 38, co-founder of a hologram company, and Michele Grieshaber, 41, a marketing executive, are turning from a two-bedroom, one-bathroom house into one with four bedrooms and two baths. Michele has owned the house for the past decade, but the couple married this past April and need more room to accommodate their new family, which includes Michael's two sons, Sam, 13, and David, 11. Add in the possibility of another child in the future, and it becomes clear that a house built for the lifestyle of a 1920s family won't cut it for this 21st-century clan.

    That said, there are many things about the house's original design that the couple plans to preserve and honor. Built before the days of hulking McMansions with 24/7 air-conditioning, the compact house was built to use natural air flow, high rooflines, and deep overhanging eaves to keep the heat at bay. It was efficient and green, and Michael and Michele have no intention of turning it into a oversized, over-cooled monstrosity devoid of its original Arts and Crafts details. In fact, their second-floor addition will only bump up the roofline by 6 feet. "We don't want a big house; we're not going to gold-plate everything," says Michele. "We don't need fancy—we need functional."
    Along with the added bedrooms, the couple's other wish-list item is an updated kitchen that opens up onto an entertaining area. Walls will move or come down entirely to allow the couple to interact with friends and family while preparing food. "I love to cook, and I'm at the stove while I'm socializing," says Michael. They also plan to spend as much time outside in the mild weather, so they'll create a screened-in porch and make sure that the entertaining areas connect easily to the outdoors. "We like to live outside more than the average Texan," explains Michael. "We're fine not having the AC on."

    That energy-saving mentality is one reason for their desire for a green renovation, but it may be the local way of life that truly influenced them. Austin, a young, tech-company town and one of the fastest growing cities in America, is at the forefront of the green movement. The Austin Green Building Program, one of the oldest in the country, will rate the project for its use of eco-friendly materials. Photovoltaic cells on the roof, rainwater collection for irrigation, spray-foam insulation, recycled-glass tile and countertops, and formaldehyde-free wood composites are just some of the resource-saving strategies and eco-friendly materials planned for the project.

    Overseeing it all will be architect David Webber and veteran green builder Bill Moore. With a budget of $250,000, they'll be working hard to incorporate the right materials and still accomplish the changes the couple need. The project will take less than five months overall, but when it's finished, Michael and Michele will have an updated version of their classic house, which they loved so much they couldn't part with it. "We did look at other, renovated houses in the neighborhood," says Michele. "But I feel responsible for this house. Houses have souls, and I need to take care of this one."

6.06.2013

How to make a nursery eco-baby friendly

Conventional paint contains benzene, formaldehyde, mercury, solvents and petrochemicals, and it sends a cloud of VOCs into your baby’s bedroom. Investing in nontoxic, VOC-free paint is a wise choice that will keep nasty chemicals out of your nursery.

Find eco-friendly products at World Class Supply

A few things to keep in mind when you're selecting paint:

Some paints carry a circular Green Wise logo on their label, which would seem like a good indication that the paint is environmentally safe. Sadly, Green Wise is green wash. The logo means only that the paint meets standards set by paint manufacturers. It doesn’t mean the paint is chemical free.
“Low odor” doesn’t mean that the paint is free of chemicals.
Zero-VOC paint is practically VOC free, but no independent standard exists to verify that.
Natural paint, made from food-safe ingredients from plants and minerals, and milk paint, made from milk protein, pigments, lime, clay and water, are safe, chemical-free choices.

Removing wall-to-wall carpet, which off-gases chemicals and harbors toxins and pollutants, is the healthiest thing you can do in your nursery. If this isn’t possible, seal existing carpet using AFM Safecoat’s SafeChoice Lock Out, which keeps chemicals from off-gassing and repels dirt and stains. Cork or colorful natural linoleum, such as the kind shown here from Eco-Friendly Flooring, are also good bets.

Keep in mind when you're choosing flooring:
  • If you choose bamboo, shop carefully. Prefinished bamboo flooring can off-gas formaldehyde and other harmful chemicals.
  • If you choose carpet, opt for untreated 100 percent wool carpet and have it installed using a tack-down method rather than glue.
  • Don’t pull up carpet yourself if you are pregnant. Pulling up the padding could expose you to a cloud of PBDEs. After the carpet is removed, have someone clean up the small particles with a HEPA-filter vacuum and mop.
Natural wood floors finished with nontoxic oils are one of the smartest choices you can make in the nursery.
Whether you use new furnishings or hand-me-downs, a little maintenance will go a long way toward creating the healthiest room for your baby.

5.27.2013

TED Talks: Catherine Mohr presents green building and embodied energy

In this  short, funny, data-packed talk at TED U, Catherine Mohr walks through all the geeky decisions she made when building a green new house -- looking at real energy numbers, not hype. What choices matter most? Not the ones you think.

http://www.ted.com/talks/catherine_mohr_builds_green.html

Catherine Mohr began her career as an engineer, working for many years with Paul MacCready at AeroVironment to develop alternative-energy vehicles and high-altitude aircraft. Her midcareer break: medical school, where she invented a brilliantly simple device, the LapCap, that makes laproscopic surgeries safer.
Mohr now oversees the development of next-generation surgical robots and robotic procedures, as the director of medical research at Intuitive Surgical Inc., where she's the clinical design leader for the DaVinci Surgical Robotic system. She also works at Stanford's School of Medicine, where she studies simulation-based teaching methods to teach clinical skills to budding doctors. And she's a senior scientific advisor to the GlobalSolver Foundation, an innovative funding and study group that looks at ways to match up scientists and money to help the world's oceans.

Now visit World Class Supply for materials that do a world of good!

Scottsdale's ideas for Green Remodeling

GBlogo_new



Here are some thoughts from Scottsdale Arizona about everything from water conservation to flooring to heating sources.



How Scottsdale does Green. Design Principles....



Scottsdale Arizona provides an extensive 18 page guide to designing Green. Be sure to also check out the useful Resource Links in this Guide.


Need green building supply?  World Class Supply provides eco-friendly windows, doors, sustainable grass seed and materials products and coatings.

5.15.2013

5 Green Home Improvements You Can Take to the Bank

by Matt Goering
Posted on Home Advisor

 Green Building

With talk of energy shortages, endangered species, and global warming dominating national headlines, it's easy to forget that going green with home remodeling is as good for your wallet as it is for the rainforest. Here's a list of 5 green remodeling projects that are good for the earth and save you cash at the same time.

#1—Install High Efficiency Replacement Windows
If you still think of a window as a single pane of glass that gives you a good view of the neighborhood, it's time to change your perspective. Modern energy efficient windows can reduce your home energy use by as much as 50% year round, and usually pay for themselves in just a few short years. If new windows are in your future, look for multiple paned windows, low e coatings, insulated frames, and gas fills. And don't forget that proper installation is just as important as buying quality windows when it comes to achieving high energy efficiency.

#2—Install a High Efficiency Heating System
Depending on the climate, heating your home can account for over 35% of your overall home energy costs. New, high efficiency furnaces and boilers can reduce those costs by as much as half, depending on where you live and how old your current heating system is. Look for units with AFUE ratings of 90 or better, and remember that poor installation can sabotage even the highest efficiency furnace.

#3—Install a High Efficiency Air Conditioner
According to the U.S. Department of Energy, air conditioning accounts for 5% of the total energy use in the U.S., and costs American homeowners $11 billion annually. That said, upgrading to a high efficiency air conditioner can make a big difference when it comes to reducing your monthly utility bills. Energy Star rated units are required to have SEER ratings of 13 or higher, though the highest efficiency models on the market currently have SEER ratings of 20 and higher. As a rule, the higher the SEER rating, the more money you'll save.

#4—New Kitchen Appliances
Kitchen appliances are a major consumer of energy in your home. Thanks to the federal government's Energy Star program, however, they're also one of the easiest ways to improve the overall energy efficiency of your home. An Energy Star dishwasher or refrigerator, for example, can reduce energy use at those appliances by 40% or more, while an Energy Star rated clothes washer can save you over $500 over the life of the appliance!
#5—Insulate, Insulate, Insulate
High efficiency furnaces, air conditioners, and windows are all excellent ways to cut energy costs and save you money, but even the best windows and heating and cooling systems won't do much if your home's insulation isn't up to speed. Leaky windows and doors, and poorly insulated attic spaces, are some of the most common culprits of energy inefficient homes, so those are good places to start. For a more comprehensive evaluation of insulation levels in your home, however, consider bringing in a professional energy auditor to help you identify where you can reap the biggest returns when it comes to upgrading the insulation in your home, and sealing up areas where leaks are costing you money!
Remember, going green is a win-win proposition. Not only does it mean you're doing everything you can to foster a better world for generations to come, but by making smart decisions on which projects you undertake, it can mean big monthly savings on your utility bills and a fuller bank account to boot.
Matt Goering, formerly a carpenter and house painter, is a freelance writer for the home improvement industry who has published over 600 articles.

5.10.2013

How to Be Sustainable and Earth-quake proof

Bamboo Houses Stand Up To Earthquakes
It is called the "poor people's timber" and even in China it is not accepted as a modern building material. But bamboo, like lumber, makes a light, flexible house that is much better than "modern" materials at surviving earthquakes. Now International Network for Bamboo and Rattan (INBAR) is actively promoting it as a replacement.
"So far, massive construction or reconstruction means concrete structures in China, and bamboo is little known for this [building on a large scale]," says Shayam Paudel, INBAR's director of bamboo housing programs, in the Christian Science Monitor. Unlike the "Tofu" concrete structures that collapsed and killed thousands of kids in substandard buildings, bamboo makes a much simpler structure.
INBAR notes that:
-At least 600 million urban dwellers in Africa, Asia and Latin America live in "life and health-threatening homes". At least one billion people do not have access to safe and healthy shelter and the number will increase dramatically with population growth if the appropriate action is not taken (UNEP, nd).
-One billion people live in bamboo houses. In Bangladesh, 73% of the population live in bamboo houses. Bamboo provides pillars, walls, window frames, rafters, room separators, ceilings and roofs.
-It has been calculated in Costa Rica that only 70 ha of bamboo plantation are sufficient to build 1000 bamboo houses per year. If these houses were built with timber, 600 ha of natural forest would be destroyed each year.
-Studies show that processing of bamboo requires only 1/8th the energy for processing of concrete and 1/3rd of that of wood to create a building material of the same capacity. In comparison to steel, bamboo needs only 1/50 of the energy for processing (Roach 1996).
- Due to the lightweight and favorable elastic properties of bamboo, buildings made from it are very good at resisting earthquakes. All 30 houses in the epicenter of a 7.6 magnitude earthquake survived without any damage in Costa Rica.
- Bamboo possesses excellent strength properties, especially tensile strength. Study shows that bamboo is as strong as wood and some species even exceed the strength of Shorea robusta and Tectona grandis (Sattar, 1995).
According to the Christian Science Monitor:
While much of modern-day building in China is done with steel and concrete, ancient Chinese intellectuals preferred living in retreats made of bamboo, a plant whose qualities were often likened to the character of an honorable man.
In Yunnan Province, which borders Sichuan, the Dai minority still lives in bamboo homes. And in affluent Zhejiang Province, where bamboo is plentiful, local officials have been encouraging architects to design recreational infrastructure using bamboo.
Building experts in China who have been testing bamboo give it the seal of approval for building in the seismic zone.
"Bamboo can be an excellent engineering material. The technology is mature. We believe the bamboo and plywood with a steel frame should be good for earthquakes," says Chen Xu He, formerly a Chinese Academy of Forestry researcher, who tested the bamboo panels used in the INBAR models. via :Archinect

5.08.2013

Green Roofs: Have Your Roof and Eat it Too


Published on Nov 29, 2012

Roger Grothe, Aloha Landscaping, Inc. shows how a green roof is built on a custom cottage along the St. Croix River in Wisconsin USA. A special pumice-based soil is used to correct a poorly installed green roof. The pumice-based soil has a 1,300% smaller carbon footprint than traditional expanded shale-based green roof soils. It ain't green if it ain't green.

You Tube Video - Residential Green Roof

Thanks, Roger!  Now all you need to choose are edible plants for your planting zone.

Find eco-friendly building and landscaping materials at World Class Supply

5.07.2013

No Boring Green Architecture Here

 
Kagithane Gardens is a premier office and retail project that is designed to catalyze a new business district in Kagithane in the northern part of Istanbul. 
The M-shaped building rises up from courtyards and gardens and provides all office areas with a narrow floor plate to provide views and plenty of natural light. Passageways on the street level cut through the building to facilitate pedestrian traffic in and around the complex.
The 100,000 sq m project will include shopping, restaurants, fitness areas and more on the publicly accessible lower levels. Flexible open plan office spaces on the upper floors connect to private terraces and rooftop gardens. Daylighting and heat gain are tempered with louvers on the exterior of the glass-walled building.
JDS says: “The project acts as a catalyst of business life for a new Istanbul, that promotes contemporary culture, architecture and lifestyle. We’ve thought a building where inside interacts with outside, where the plan is flexible to allow for anyone to find its desired space and place, whether it be a small one man show company or a large corporate office employing hundreds.” “We believe life is plural and various entities should coexist and exchange their experiences. The Kagithane Gardens is where such a rich diversity can find its place.”
Via WAN



Inhabitat.com is a weblog devoted to the future of design, tracking the innovations in technology, practices and materials that are pushing architecture and home design towards a smarter and more sustainable future.
Inhabitat was started by NYC designer Jill Fehrenbacher as a forum for investigating emerging trends in product, interior, and architectural design. Managing Editor Mike Chino leads the editorial team, while Alyssa Alimurung assists with daily business operations. The rest of the team is made up of the best design editors and writers from all over the world: Yuka Yoneda (New York Editor), Diane Pham (Architecture and Design Editor), Bridgette Meinhold (Architecture Editor), Jasmin Malik Chua (Copy Editor and Fashion Editor at Ecouterre) and Julie Seguss (Kids and Wellness Editor).

World Class Supply carries highly sustainable building products!
 






5.02.2013

Green Building Myth #1: It's More Expensive

Alex Wilson, Contributor
Excerpted From
Your Green Home
April 8th, 2010
Having written about green building for more than twenty years now, I’ve encountered lots of misperceptions. One of those is that green building always has to cost a lot more than conventional building. There are plenty of examples where it does cost more (sometimes significantly more), but it doesn’t have to, and green choices can even reduce costs in some cases. Let me explain.
Trade some quantity for quality. When someone is considering building a green home, my first, number-one recommendation is to keep the size down. Since 1950, the average house size in the U.S. has more than doubled, while family size has dropped by 25% — so you’re providing 2.8 times more area per person than you were back then. If you think you need a 3,000 square-foot house, consider whether 2,500 would suffice, or even less. There are some really great homes being built at 1,400 to 1,500 square feet — homes where every square foot is optimally used and there aren’t rooms, like formal dining rooms, that sit empty most of the time.
Often, because we’re conditioned to think that bigger is better or because we’re told by a real estate agent that a house has to be large to keep its value, we build the largest home possible. By stretching budgets to maximize square footage, we’re then often forced to skimp on quality and performance. If, instead, we downsize the house, we can improve its quality (durability, detailing, energy efficiency, green features), and we might even be able to reduce the overall costs.
Bundle systems with neighbors rather than going it alone. With green building, there may be some other ways to lower costs that don’t require reducing the house size. At the development scale, if you design an onsite infiltration system for stormwater (rather than building a stormwater retention pond or installing storm sewers) that could both reduce costs and make the project greener. With larger facilities, it’s sometimes possible to save millions of dollars with such changes — paying for all of the additional green features.
Where you build can also influence cost. By clustering houses in a development, you can reduce the total amount of pavement, the length of utility lines, and other associated infrastructure costs. By putting a house fairly close to the access road, you both save costs and reduce the impacts of that additional pavement and material usage.
Use materials frugally. There are some important ways to use materials more efficiently and save money. With “advanced framing,” studs and rafters (or roof trusses) can be installed 24 inches on-center, rather than the standard 16 inches, reducing the amount of wood used in construction. By carefully planning overall building dimensions and ceiling heights, one can optimize material use and reduce cut-off waste.
And it’s sometimes possible to have a structural material serve as a finished surface, obviating the need for an additional layer. This can be done when structural floor slabs are made into finished floors (often by pigmenting and/or polishing  the concrete), or when a masonry block is used that has a decorative face, eliminating the need for another wall finish.
Look for cost tradeoffs. When it comes to energy, building a green, energy-efficient house usually does increase costs. But we can significantly reduce that extra cost — occasionally even eliminate it — by practicing “integrated energy design.” If we spend more money on the building envelope (more insulation, tighter construction detailing, and better windows) so that we dramatically reduce the heating and cooling loads, we can often save money on the heating and cooling equipment. With a really tight, energy-efficient house, for example, we might be able to eliminate the $10,000 to $15,000 distributed heating system in favor of one or two simple, through-the-wall-vented, high-efficiency gas space heaters, or even a few strips of electric resistance heat.
If, along with that really well-insulated envelope, we carefully select east- and west-facing window glazings that block most of the solar gain and provide natural shading from appropriately planted trees, we might even be able to eliminate central air conditioning.
These savings on mechanical equipment can cover a lot of the added cost of the improved building envelope. In rare cases, these savings in heating and cooling equipment (if we eliminate a really expensive system, such as a ground-source heat pump, for example), we can pay for all of the envelope improvements and even reduce the total project cost.

Comprehensive Green Remodeling: Less Known Facts


by Marcus Pickett
for  Home Advisor

Green has become its cultural phenomenon. Like any item of pop culture, there are certain truisms that seem to make countless appearances in headlines and press releases and a whole other side that rarely, if ever, gets mentioned. Anyone into "going green" is probably familiar with such things as energy-saver light bulbs, zero-VOC paint, and bamboo, several other realities of the home construction, remodeling, and maintenance industry may play an equally big role into the other sustainable practices and green value of your home projects.
Don't Be Too Quick To Hug: Protected Trees and Tree Farms
Since of the first eco-friendly slogans and pejorative phrases for followers of sustainable living was "tree-hugging" and "tree-hugger," it might surprise some to find out that the greenest construction material for your home and your home remodeling is, often, natural wood harvested from a tree farm. All trees are not created equal. There's a big difference between California Redwoods, subtropical rainforests, and trees from your nearby tree farm. These latter trees are grown and harvested in ways that keep American construction going while protecting older, indigenous, and endangered tree species.
Pulled from the American Tree Farm System's website, the inherently green qualities of these trees can be summed up in this definition of sustainable forestry, "Sustainable forestry means managing our forests to meet the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs by practicing a land stewardship ethic which integrates the reforestation, managing, growing, nurturing and harvesting of trees for useful products with the conservation of soil, air and water quality, wildlife and fish habitat and aesthetics." U.S. Forests Facts & Figures 2001, Clemson University and AFF
It's easy to see the difference in these types of trees, but what is, often, overlooked is that choosing wood for your home remodeling is often more eco-friendly that alternative materials. Limited supplies of aluminum, the energy it takes to manufacture synthetic materials, and the low environmental impact of these tree farms may mean that the best thing you can do for the environment is to use a tree.

Look in Your Own Backyard
Regardless of the material choose, regardless of the home improvement or remodel you're undertaking, one universal factor to look at and one that is frequently ignored is how far your materials have to travel to get to your home. The greater the distance the more energy is needed to transport those materials. Measuring the exact environmental impact of these transportation costs can be difficult and you certainly don't need to restrict your material selection to your own zip code, but it's definitely something to consider.
Here's one extreme, but not totally uncommon scenario: Stone tiles that cost $20 per sq. ft. instead of $5 per sq. ft. could be a sign that the tiles are traveling all over the world. In some cases, stone tile may be quarried in Brazil, shipped to China to be fabricated, and then shipped back to the States for your kitchen counter. The vast majority of the cost of this stone is eaten up by the cost of travel. The true cost of this tile affects the environment just as much as the cost of your kitchen remodel.
Keep in mind, too, that custom home remodeling doesn't necessarily have to mean customized materials. Several areas of green remodeling and construction cost more than conventional methods, but sometimes the price tag can be indicative of the environmental impact....
Green Now, Green Later: Energy Output v. Maintenance
Along with the distance a material must travel, you should take a look at its upkeep, as even basic maintenance of some installations can have an environmental impact. Take, for example, stone countertops. Engineered stone and some types of natural stone countertops don't require sealant. If you buy marble or another porous stone countertop, you may need to periodically reseal the stone with high VOC (Volatile Organic Compound) sealant or lower-quality zero-VOC sealant, but that's not the only question to ask your countertop contractor. You'll also want to ask for zero-VOC adhesive for the installation, and if you're doing things from scratch, plywood substrate free from formaldehyde.
Remember the trees? Well, residential fencing creates an interesting green remodeling debate. Aluminum and vinyl fencing may require greater energy output to install, but wood fencing not only requires sealant, but requires it every year or every other year. Unless you're diligent in buying zero-VOC sealant, wood fencing probably results in a wash. There are a number of lines of residential fencing fashioned from recycled materials such as plastic grocery bags, but you should talk to a green fencing contractor and ask how much energy is needed to reincarnate these recycled materials into viable fencing.
Marcus Pickett is a professional freelance writer for the home remodeling industry. He has published more than 600 articles on both regional and national topics within the home improvement industry.
World Class Supply has great products to help you go green!!!

AIA/COTE Announces 2013 Top Ten Green Projects

Nadav Malin
This story first appeared on BuildingGreen.
April 23, 2013
355 11th Street: The Matarozzi/Pelsinger Multi-Use Building; Aidlin Darling Design; San Francisco, California
With an outstanding 2013 line-up, the American Institute of Architects’ Committee on the Environment (AIA/COTE) Top Ten Green Projects continues in its role as the nation’s premier showcase of projects that marry good design and green performance.
This year’s projects continue the strong focus from 2012 on social consciousness. “This group of projects underscored the social value of providing high functioning buildings for people who are often without the benefit of that,” notes juror Gail Vittori of the Center for Maximum Potential Building Systems. Working with limited budgets didn’t seem to hurt many of the winners. In fact, as juror Fiona Cousins of Arup points out, “In many cases, the slightly more financially constrained budgets actually produced better outcomes.”
There was a wide spread in terms of energy performance among the submissions. Juror Lance Hosey of RTKL laments that “only half the submissions conformed to current targets for the 2030 Commitment,” yet there were many, especially among the winners, that either achieved or came close to achieving net-zero energy. The energy strategies were generally well integrated but otherwise unsurprising, while “the water category was where the experimentation and innovation was happening,” says Vittori. A number of projects are driving code changes in their communities, blazing a trail for future projects by making nonpotable water sources more acceptable to health officials. But the biggest news is the first-ever Top Ten Plus awardee: 355 11th Street in San Francisco achieved the recognition as a past Top Ten winner (in 2010) and has proven itself through ongoing performance.
Top Ten Plus Winner: 355 11th Street, The Matarozzi/Pelsinger Multi-Use Building
Aidlin Darling Design
Since earning LEED Gold certification in 2009 and garnering a 2010 AIA Top Ten, this derelict historic building became home to a cherished restaurant that itself earned LEED for Commercial Interiors Platinum certification. The restaurant kitchen uses much more energy than the construction firm’s offices above, which are beating their modeled prediction despite a 40% increase in occupancy. The bicycle storage and changing rooms are put to good use, as 65% of the 81 employees in the building’s three business either bike or take public transportation.
A New Norris House
College of Architecture & Design, University of Tennessee–Knoxville
This tiny model home recaptures and updates many of the enduring features of the original model homes built 75 years ago in Norris, Tennessee—one of the first planned communities in the U.S. The 1,000-square-foot modular home brings to the established community a new ecological consciousness in the form of native plantings, water efficiency, energy efficiency, day lighting, and material choices, among other features. The interdisciplinary design-build curriculum that created the home was recognized in 2011 with the prestigious NCARB Prize for the Creative Integration of Practice and Education.
Charles David Keeling Apartments
KieranTimberlake
This project comprises three buildings wrapped around a courtyard that greatly enhance the student housing options at the University of California–San Diego. Overlooking the Pacific Ocean in a mild climate, the apartments are designed to take advantage of natural ventilation and views, with exterior walkways. A layered facade provides both fixed and operable shading to prevent overheating, helping avoid the need for air conditioning. Responding to the high value of water in this arid climate, the project is the first in the University of California campus system to harvest graywater, which is used to irrigate plantings on the vegetated roof and at grade level.
Clock Shadow Building
Continuum Architects + Planners
Providing a home for several healthcare-related nonprofit organizations in an underserved neighborhood of Milwaukee, the four-story Clock Shadow Building proves that a tight budget need not interfere with ambitious goals. To make use of the narrow brownfield site, the upper stories are cantilevered over a public right-of-way. The designers and builders collaborated throughout the process to use as many salvaged materials as possible by identifying and procuring some materials early on and by adjusting the design to accommodate others as they became available. The project embraces natural ventilation during temperate swing seasons, and a rooftop garden gives tenants a pleasant outdoor space. The garden and a cistern ensure that the project doesn’t contribute to combined sewer overflow events; this is the first project permitted in Milwaukee to use rainwater to flush toilets.
Federal Center South Building 1202
ZGF Architects


The 209,000-square-foot Building 1202 on Seattle’s Federal Center South Campus is a new regional headquarters for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Northwest District. A range of energy-efficiency measures, including a thermal storage tank with a phase-change material that melts at 55°F, contribute to an impressive predicted site energy use intensity (EUI) of 21 kBtu/ft2. The design-build team has a direct financial stake in ensuring it reaches this target: 0.5% of the original contract value is at risk pending verification of the building’s energy performance after one year of occupancy. A significant percentage of structural timber and decking were reclaimed from an old warehouse on the site. Rainwater collection and reuse, together with exterior rain gardens that infiltrate water from the site, eliminate the need for a connection to the city’s overtaxed stormwater system.
The new Learning Resource Center at this ecologically minded private school in Corte Madera, California, includes a new library and technology center, art studios, classrooms and student services offices in 23,000 square feet of new buildings and 10,600 square feet of renovated space. A redesigned central courtyard, playground, and restored creek greatly enhance the associated outdoor spaces. More than 90% of the indoor spaces depend on natural ventilation, shading, and night-flushing with thermal mass in lieu of air conditioning, and most rooms have glare-free daylight from two or three directions. An underground cistern provides thermal storage while also holding rainwater from the rooftops for use in toilets and cooling towers, which provide cool water for use in radiant slabs without additional mechanical equipment. Using the project pedagogically, students helped with the creek restoration and will perform ongoing water quality monitoring and compare energy use for lighting and plug loads on a classroom-by-classroom basis.
Merritt Crossing Senior Apartments
Leddy Maytum Stacy Architects
One of the first projects near the Lake Merritt BART regional transit station at the edge of Oakland, California’s Chinatown, Merritt Crossing offers affordable senior housing on an abandoned site near a busy freeway. An independent screen wall buffers the units from the highway. Ceiling fans rather than air conditioning help provide summertime comfort. The project proved its mettle using four different rating systems: LEED for Homes Mid-Rise Pilot Program (Platinum Level), Build-It-Green GreenPoints (206 Points), Energy Star (first certified multifamily in California), and Bay Friendly Landscaping (104 Points). A full-scale mockup of a wall section provided important lessons for construction of the building envelope, which includes exterior rigid insulation, a vapor-permeable weather barrier, custom window profiles, and rainscreen cladding. The mockup was air- and water-tested to ensure its performance.
Pearl Brewery/Full Goods Warehouse
Lake|Flato Architects with Durand-Hollis Rupe Architects
A new master plan that is revitalizing a long-derelict section of San Antonio’s inner city is crowned by the adaptive reuse of the 67,000-square-foot Full Goods Warehouse into vibrant retail and office space. The designers added a mezzanine level to the sprawling warehouse, greatly increasing density, and provided extensive indoor-outdoor spaces. It also sports a 200 kW photovoltaic array, the largest rooftop installation in Texas. The full Pearl Brewery master plan includes residential units, a hotel, a farmers market, and an outdoor entertainment venue, anchoring redevelopment of the much larger River North District. Among the many reused elements from the historic brewery are 7,600-gallon beer vats now holding captured rainwater for landscape irrigation.
San Francisco Public Utilities Commission Headquarters
KMD Architects with Stevens + Associates
San Francisco commissioned this new 277,500-square foot, 13-story office building to concentrate administrative staff of its Public Utilities Commission, which was previous scattered in leased space. The building’s sculptural façade features both a dynamic art installation and wind turbines that provide a predicted 0.15% of the building’s energy. Rooftop photovoltaics are designed to produce nearly 6%. Light shelves in the window walls help daylight penetrate to the interior. Onsite blackwater treatment meets all of the project’s non-potable water needs. The project is seeking LEED Platinum certification. In support of San Francisco’s purchasing policies, the projects sought to avoid materials made of PVC, and the use of fly ash and slag in lieu of portland cement reduced carbon dioxide emissions by an estimated 7.4 million pounds.
Swenson Civil Engineering Building
Ross Barney Architects with SJA Architects
Civil Engineering is a new program at the University of Minnesota Duluth. Large gestures with significant environmental benefits include the decision to abut the new facility against an existing engineering building, which reduced exposed exterior walls in this severe climate and located the project on a parking lot rather than taking up vegetated open space. The designers also made large, column-free testing bays double as assembly spaces, saving significant floor area and cost. A displacement ventilation system enhances thermal comfort and air quality and reduces energy consumption in the high-bay spaces, contributing to a modeled overall 77% reduction in energy use.
The large entry hall and stairway on the north façade are not conditioned to the same level as the classrooms but instead serve as buffer zones. Rainwater is also managed on-site with rooftop vegetation, rain gardens, and French drains.
Yin Yang House
Brooks + Scarpa
This 3,800-square-foot Venice, California, home and office elegantly combines business and residential functions. Much of a smaller preexisting structure was retained in the new building, and the designers kept impervious site area to a bare minimum. Using primarily passive strategies, the project’s design beat California’s Title 24 Energy Code by 42%, which translates to 94% better than a typical home. All of the home’s electrical needs, and much of its total energy, are met by the 12 kW rooftop photovoltaic system. The building form is inherently self-shading, and all space are designed for natural ventilation and daylight. The owner and designers chose both materials and technologies based on a 50-year anticipated time before major renovations, which justified significant investments in quality and efficiency.
Disclosure: BuildingGreen, Inc., provides editorial and technical services for the online submissions and presentation of the AIA/COTE Top Ten.
Copyright 2013 by BuildingGreen Inc.

4.26.2013

Passive Houses Aggressively Reduce Energy

By Wendy Koch, USA TODAY
Updated 2011-02-23 8:26 AM
By H. Darr Beiser, USA TODAY
Heat your home by throwing a dinner party?
This concept may sound bizarre, but it's feasible in cutting-edge green homes that are so well-insulated, they don't need a furnace or boiler. They'll stay warm simply with body heat. A hairdryer might also suffice.
"It's like living in a glass thermos," says John Eckfeldt, a physician who built one of these "passive" homes in frigid Isabella, Minn. He says the inside temperature is so even that if he sees snow falling, he's surprised to realize it must be cold outside.
The windows never feel cold, nor do the concrete floors, even though they don't have in-floor heating, says Joe Turner of his "passive" home in Salt Lake City. "The house is also super quiet."
The passive house movement, popularized in Europe, where thousands of such homes have been built, is starting to catch on in the United States as consumers look to lower their utility bills. These homes don't require pricey solar panels or wind turbines but focus on old-fashioned building science to reduce energy use by up to 90% less energy.


Courtesy of Nancy Schultz


They're different from the "passive solar" homes of the 1970s, which used a lot of south-facing windows for heating, because they emphasize other features: thick walls and roofs (often at least a foot) and triple-paned windows, as well as efficient appliances and lighting. The secret is tightness, achieved via superior insulation and air sealing. A mechanical system brings in fresh air, heating or cooling it as needed.
Few U.S. homes, only a dozen so far, have obtained certification from the Passive House Institute US, a private Illinois-based group that bases its rules on the German Passivhaus standard.
Yet, dozens of homes nationwide are now being designed to meet its strict energy efficiency requirements.
"It's growing exponentially," says Tom DiGiovanni, who heads the Passive House Alliance, a group established last year to promote the standard. He says more than 400 people are now trained as passive house consultants, up from 20 two years ago.
"It feels like we're almost at a tipping point," he says, citing factors such as high energy prices and the Obama administration's push for energy efficiency. "It's like the perfect storm."
Proponents say the passive standard's prime tenets — insulation and air sealing — can also be used by owners of existing homes to boost energy efficiency.
"It holds great promise for this country," says Alex Wilson, executive editor of Environmental Building News. He says the needed materials, especially windows, are becoming more affordable, and building codes are demanding greater efficiency.
"It could be mainstream five years from now," says Nate Kredich of the private U.S. Green Building Council, which has its own green rating system. He says its popularity may depend on whether production builders jump on board and prices fall.
How much more?
Passive homes cost 6% to 12% more than other new homes, but they recoup that premium in lower utility bills in seven to 12 years, DiGiovanni says.
"The biggest extra cost is the windows," he says, noting that U.S. companies have only recently begun making triple-pane windows, so some builders had to import them. California-based Serious Materials makes ultra-efficient dual-pane windows that several U.S. passive homes have used.
Still, he says passive homes can be built on a budget, especially in multi-unit buildings. He says several affordable housing projects, including a 48-unit site in Urbana, Ill., are underway.
"It's innately reasonable," says architect David Peabody, who designed the first passive house in the Washington, D.C., area. He says the extra cost was about 8%, but the annual utility bills for the 4,200-square-foot home are projected at less than $750. U.S. households spent an average of $2,639 on energy costs for homes that size in 2005, the most recent year for which U.S. government data are available.
In Lafayette, La., architecture professor Corey Saft estimates his solar-equipped passive home cost about 10% more than a regular new home. He built it for $110 per square foot, which he says is inexpensive for a custom home. Census Bureau data indicate new homes in the South — many by production builders — sold for an average of $76.77 per square foot in 2009.
"It's the most cost-effective way of accomplishing the least energy use," says architect Dennis Wedlick, who designed New York state's first passive house. He says there was no premium for his Hudson Valley project, because he used Serious' U.S.-made windows and offset the cost of extra insulation by using a tiny, inexpensive ductless heating and air conditioning system.
Yet, Wedlick sees potential obstacles. "It could take a long time to get certified," he says, adding the program is being thoroughly developed but still lacks the staff to handle the booming demand.
Certification can cost several thousand dollars. The Institute charges about $1,000 to review an application for a 2,000-square-foot home, but that doesn't include the cost of hiring a consultant to advise on design and an independent auditor to verify the home's efficiency.
Looks count, too
Another challenge could be aesthetics. Most U.S. passive homes have limited windows and a boxy shape, which is the easiest geometry to keep insulated and highly energy efficient.
Homes with curves and larger footprints require extra insulation and sealing that add to the cost. Eckfeldt says his stylish passive home, with huge curved windows and upscale finishes, cost $450 per square foot.
Just how tough is the standard? John Semmelhack, a passive house consultant in Charlottesville, Va., reviewed one home designed to earn the top rating from the U.S. Green Building Council and determined it wouldn't qualify as a passive house for several reasons: It has too many windows; the windows don't absorb enough solar heat; and the L-shaped, courtyard house isn't a simple cube.
"The hardest type of house to meet the passive standard is a small detached single-family home," says Semmelhack, adding it's easier to meet it with larger commercial spaces, schools or — as is commonly the case in Germany — apartment buildings. He advised on how to get a school in Charlottesville certified; two other U.S. schools have already passed the test.
Climate could also be a challenge for the passive standard.
"It favors a (temperate) climate like Germany's," says Kevin Morrow of the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB). He says U.S. weather is much more diverse — some tropical, some Arctic and some a mixture of both.
Exacting requirements
Regardless of location, passive homes cannot have a heating or cooling load above 4,755 British thermal units per square foot, which is about one-tenth that of homes built to current U.S. codes. They must also be virtually airtight, which requires meticulous sealing of ducts, joints and hairline cracks.
"You can't greenwash this. You have to be a terrific builder to do this," Wedlick says.
To avoid overheating in warm areas, passive homes need exterior shading, ventilation and a cooling system, says German-born architect Katrin Klingenberg. She built her own home in Urbana to the Passivhaus standard in 2002 and opened the U.S. institute in 2008.
"It's basic building science, but it's taken to a high level," says Morrow, adding that NAHB may incorporate passive home rules into its own green building standard.
Kredich says the U.S. Green Building Council may do the same.
Unlike those programs, which also rate homes for water conservation, renewable building materials and other aspects of green building, the passive standard looks only at energy efficiency.
The U.S. Department of Energy did some of the original research on it decades ago, but with energy prices lower in the U.S. than Europe, the standard didn't take off until German physicist Wolfgang Feist founded the Passivhaus Institute in Darmstadt, Germany, in 1996.
One of the standard's benefits is that it makes it relatively easy for homes to become net zero energy, which means they produce as much power as they use, says David Johnston, author of Toward a Zero Energy Home. Because passive homes don't use much energy, he says, a small solar energy system will often be enough to meet their needs.
Saft made his passive home net-zero by adding a three-kilowatt solar array.
So did Eckfeldt and his wife, architect Nancy Schultz, who designed their Isabella home, using photovoltaics to offset their energy needs.
Yet, they can survive even the worst of winter without any help from the sun or backup heating. In December 2009, their house's boiler didn't work for 10 cloudy days when they were out of town and outside temperatures dipped well below zero.
How cold did it get inside? The thermostat held at 51 degrees.

Find Passive House certified windows and other eco-friendly products at World Class Supply

4.10.2013

What is the best coverage for wood?


And the answer is....

OSMO Wood Wax Finish
This product offers the functionality of paint, without the need to prime. It covers any discoloration or other defects on the wood surface but does not build to hide the wood's grain. The structure of the wood is still apparent. This finish is suitable for floors. For maxium durability, top with a coat of OSMO Polyx Oil. This product can also be used as a semitransparent stain to add color and bring out wood grain. To use it this way, brush on and wipe off.
Because the finish is microporous, any moisture that does get through can also evaporate without causing the finish to peel.  OSMO makes two solid-color stains. It comes in deep colors, all of which can be intermixed to create custom shades. The other finish, Opaque Gloss Wood Stain, can be used indoors or out but the color selection is limited to white and pastels.

Benefits of OSMO Wood Wax Finish Opaque
Environmental benefits:
Made mostly from readily renewable, natural ingredients.
Meets European safety standards for use on children's furniture and toys and resistance to perspiration and saliva.
Contains no biocides or preservatives, only aliphatic low-odor mineral spirits that meet the German standard for purity.
Practical benefits:
High solids content—approximately 70 percent.
Easy to apply—just two thin coats. Does not raise the grain of wood, so there's no need to sand between coats.
Won't peel, rub or flake off.

Coverage:
One liter covers approximately 200 square feet with one coat or 120 square feet with two coats.
How to use this product
a. Preparation
Vacuum to remove dust from the surface.
Provide ventilation.

Application
To use as a solid-color stain: Stir well. Use a stiff, natural-bristle brush (OSMO brushes, with their short bristles, work very well) and apply one thin coat. Brush in the direction of the wood grain. Let dry for approximately 12 hours. Apply a second coat and let it dry.
To use as a transparent stain: Brush on one thin coat and wipe off the finish immediately with a cloth or sponge until the surface has the intensity of color you desire. On large surfaces, work in sections.

Cleanup
Clean brushes with mineral spirits or the benzene-free OSMO Brush Cleaner.

Storage
Can be stored up to five years or more. Store in a dry place. Frostproof.

Safety
Ingredients: Approximately 70 percent solids (the part of the paint that remains on the wood after the finish dries): natural oils and waxes, iron oxide and titanium dioxide pigments, water-repellent additives and lead-free dryers.
Approximately 30 percent solvents: aliphatic low-odor mineral spirits that meet the German standard for purity.

Thermally Modified Wood - so eco-friendly!!!




MATERIAL STRATEGIES

Innovative Applications in Architecture


JUST WOOD: THERMALLY MODIFIED TIMBER

Wood as a building material has many virtues including its impressive strength to weigh ratio, relatively high insulating value, beautiful grain patterns, warm color, and soft tactility. However, despite these admirable qualites it also has one key limiting factor: it’s natural propensity to absorb and hold moisture, resulting in swelling, warping, and ultimately deterioration and decomposition. For this reason, denser, slower-growing hardwoods such as mahogany, teak, and oak have historically been the most sought after species due to their limited absorption capacity, superior dimensionally stability, structural strength, and aesthetically consistency in color and grain.
However, softwoods such as pine, fir, spruce, and birch make up the vast majority of wood used today. Because of their inherent vulnerability to water, aging, and decomposition, wood used in exterior applications are typically either impregnated with a copper-based solution such as chromate copper arsenate, alkaline copper quaternary, or copper azole, or sealed and finished using petroleum-based polyurethanes, lacquers, and varnishes. These chemical treatments essentially transform a completely organic material into hazardous waste once it’s building use has expired. Alternatives to these metal and petroleum-based treatments are slowly gaining in popularity due to increased environmental considerations. One particularly promising alternative is the use of heat alone to transform the chemical and physical make-up of wood for exterior architectural use.

Finnish Pavillion at the 2000 Hannover Expo
The benefit of thermally modifying timber has actually been know for over a century, and the detailed chemical processes involved in thermal modification is something well known to wood scientists. However, only in the past decade has a systematic testing and analysis made thermal modification a commercially viable process. Developed largely in Finland over the past ten years, thermally modified timber uses kilns set to a temperature of around 400° F for anywhere from 20-75 hours. During this prolonged exposure to high heat, the wood undergoes a series of complicated chemical and physical transformations that together dramatically increase the wood’s weather and fungi resistance, dimensional stability, and visual consistency.
The wood’s resins become chemically transformed by the heat into a natural water repellant that is essentially baked into the structural cellulose of the wood. Furthermore, the hemicellulose sugars which play very little structural role but are the most easily digested part of the wood and thus the primary attraction for water-born bacteria and fungi, is broken down and crystalized within a more rigid and inelastic structural matrix, greatly reducing the wood’s water absorption capacity. These chemical and physical transformations at the cellular level result in a building material with significantly decreased water absorption rates, increased resistance to fungi and biodegradation, and improved dimensional stability with a limited decrease in structural performance (likely due to decreased overall density). Furthermore, the natural chemical transformations in the wood result in a deep, rich coloration throughout the full cross-section of the timber. The thermal modification of fast-growing softwood species such as spruce, pine, birch, and aspen seems to offer an economically and ecologically viable alternative to both the chemical impregnation of softwoods and the unsustainable harvesting of tropical hardwood for architectural applications.

Twelve years of direct contact with the ground has not affected this piece of thermally modified wood by Stellac Wood. Photo by Seppo Paavilainen.
sources:
B.F. Tjeerdsma, M. Boonstra, A. Pizzi, P. Tekely, H. Militz.  Characterization of thermally modified wood: molecular reasons for wood performance improvement. Springer-Verlag 1998.
Kekkonen, Paivi M., Ville-Veikko Telkki, and Jukka Jokisaari. Effect of Thermal Modification on Wood Cell Structures Observed by Pulse-Field-Gradient Stimulated-Echo NMR. Oulu: Department of Physics, University of Oulu. 2010.
Wikberg, Hanne, and Sirkka Lissa Maunu. Characterisation of thermally modifed hard- and softwoods by 13C CPMAS NMR. Helsinki: Department of Chemistry, University of Helsinki. 2004