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April 27, 2009

Design Your Green Home

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Dream a Green HomeHow would you design your ultimate green home? My green home is one that incorporates Earth, Wind, and Fire!

Think of what technology might make possible in the next few decades and how we can use it to build homes that have a positive impact on the environment.

The growing awareness of the fact that buildings are responsible for 39% of our energy consumption, helps explain why green building and energy efficiency at home is one of the most pervasive trends in the construction industry — even as the economy struggles and home-building is at its lowest level in a generation.

Lets take a journey through our imagination and envision the green homes of tomorrow.

Green Visions Today

Now is a time of re-examining our values and re-examining what we need to continue to live comfortably, but in a sustainable way that is more in tune with our natural environment. So, if you could design the green home of your dreams, what would it look like?

What would it be made of?

How would it produce and consume energy?

For architect William McDonough of the Charlottesville, Virginia, his home would mymic a tree. Instead of building a home from the elements of a tree, his home would replicate the the life cycle of a living tree. The surface of his house, like a leaf, would contain a photosynthetic layer that captures sunlight. Unlike today’s solar panels, which are often pasted above a roof line, Mr. McDonough’s panels would be woven into the fabric of the exterior. Water would be heated and electricity for the home  would be generated from the solar energy.

A Chameleon Home?

Wouldn’t it be cool if your home could change colors according to the temperature outside to heat or cool the interior of the home? At architecture firm Cook+Fox, they’ve come up with a concept called biomimicry, which means we look at nature’s way of solving problems as much as trying to adapt technology to solve them.

Mr. Cook’s green home has a skin that reacts to the weather, turning dark in the bright sun to insulate the house from heat and turning clear on dark days to absorb as much light and heat as possible. An example of this concept is the firm’s biggest green project in New York city at the headquarters of Bank of America, which is known as One Bryant Park.

The sculpted white-glass tower creates massive ice blocks in the evening when electricity is cheapest. As the “ice batteries” melt, they are used to cool the building during times of peak electricity loads during the day.

My Green Home: Earth, Wind, and Fire

I’m gonna put together my green home now, taking elements that are old, current, and dreamlike.

The future is great, but how can we incorporate building elements from the past to build green, sustainable homes?

My green home would be built from the Earth. One of my personal favorites is the straw bale home. I love the simplicity of building a home from mud (Earth) and an agricultural waste product to produce a home that is surprisingly fire resistant. Go figure!

For electricity, I’m going to harness the wind. Since my ideal home would sit a top a mountain over looking the sea, wind power should be plentiful.

Finally, I’m going to incorporate some heat for water and those cool winter nights. What better source for heat than our friendly neighbor high above; the sun? Solar water heating is a great way to not only heat the water you use, but to heat the water in order to keep your home warm through radiant heating floors.

So there you have it, my dream green home.

What can you envision?

Photo Credit: NREL Photographic Information Exchange

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