Tag Archives: energy efficiency

The Cost of Living Comfortably

Only four decades ago, there were almost no airconditioners in Australian households. Now they’re in two out of every three.

”More people are using airconditioning more frequently, and they’re putting them in more rooms of their houses,” says Yolande Strengers from RMIT’s Centre for Design.

She says that this remarkable colonisation is not only about the technology, but also about the way we’ve adapted to it. Now, our buildings are designed for airconditioning. Many houses no longer include features such as eaves or cross-ventilation that help you get along without it. And in our offices, we’ve become accustomed to dressing the same way all year round.

All those things contribute to a change in our expectations of indoor comfort. And the shift is happening in a way that ratchets up our energy consumption.

Contact the appraisers at www.scappraisalserv.com for your questions regarding energy efficiency = value?

Typically, green groups and governments try to reduce energy and water use by providing information and rebates, and hoping we’ll make rational decisions in response. There’s another way of thinking about these issues – one that doesn’t view them as matters of individual choice but, rather, as social practices.

One of the most influential thinkers in this field is Elizabeth Shove, from Lancaster University. In her book, Comfort, Cleanliness and Convenience: the Social Organisation of Normality, she wrote that much environmentally significant consumption is invisible, bound up in our daily routines.

Professor Shove analysed trends in the way we use heating and cooling, the frequency of showering and laundering, and the proliferation of time-saving gadgets and habits. She found they’d changed radically, and that many of our new expectations involved higher resource consumption (although that isn’t inevitable).

At RMIT, Dr Strengers leads a research area called Beyond Behaviour Change. ”The standard message is that you can just go on as you are, but turn your lights off and change your shower head,” she says. ”But while we’ve been saying that, the general international trend is that the resource intensity of a lot of domestic practices is still going up.”

Read more at: http://smh.domain.com.au/green/the-cost-of-living-comfortably-20120728-233ai.html

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America’s Oldest Net-Zero Home

 
Turning a century-old Victorian house into a net-zero home might sound like an ambitious goal for a young couple in their first home, but Kelly and Matt Grocoff, a self-described “average couple” from Ann Arbor, Michigan, did just that, and now own the oldest home in America to achieve net-zero energy. In 2006, when Matt and Kelly bought their 1901 home in a walkable, historic neighborhood, they knew they wanted to go net-zero someday, but they didn’t imagine they would be producing more energy than they use in five short years.

“It was just a fantasy at the time we started looking for a house,” says Matt, a longtime green-building enthusiast and net-zero energy consultant who founded and hosts GreenovationTV. “We wanted to find an old house with good bones and restore it, then work toward net-zero. I thought net-zero would be 10 years away, but before we knew it, all the stars aligned with incentives and everything else, and we were able to get our solar panels up in 2010,” he says.
Energy Basics
Matt and Kelly were motivated to take on their efficiency overhaul because they wanted to help reduce our nation’s overall carbon footprint. “There are 130 million homes in the U.S. right now, and they account for almost a quarter of our greenhouse gas emissions,” Matt says. “We realized that even if every single new home from here on out were built to net-zero energy, it would do nothing to reduce our current carbon emissions.” Read more: http://www.naturalhomeandgarden.com/green-homes/solar-homes/net-zero-home-zmfz12mjzmel.aspx#ixzz1rw1Ee4Lm

 
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Big Budget Renovations Come With Added Risk

Renovating used to be relatively simple. If the house was getting cramped, you would tack on another room, if the apartment kitchen was a bit dated, you might give it a lick of paint or maybe some new cupboard doors. Not these days.

Contact the appraisers at www.socalappraisalserv.com to help you determine if your renovation will add the value you are seeking. 

Today nothing escapes the eyes of the renovator. Egged on by television shows and the high price of moving, they seem to think everything about a house or an apartment needs to change: ripping out walls, moving kitchens, putting in attic storage, opening up the back to add more light. Nothing, it seems, is off limits. Even fixtures, fittings and building materials now have to be top-notch. Just think of what gets a mention in a real estate advertisement: European appliances, specific types of timber floorboards or a computer-controlled lighting system.

Read more and see video at: http://smh.domain.com.au/real-estate-news/extreme-makeovers-20120316-1v8t0.html

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