Tag Archives: green home

Modular Home Being Built In a MultiMillion Dollar Neighborhood – La Jolla

It’s not every day you see up to 60-foot-long, factory-built pieces of a home trucked, lifted and stacked over a course of two days.

Nine pieces that make up a multimillion-dollar “green” project named Casabrava took shape on a prepped site in La Jolla on Thursday and Friday after a trip from a factory in Utah. Over the next two weeks, workers will “stitch” together the pieces to prepare for finishes.

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The project’s vision: Homes made on factory lines can look and feel as sophisticated as traditional homes built on site, said Heather Johnston, an architect and future occupant of Casabrava. Prefabricated construction is also more efficient and more environmentally friendly, Johnston said.

“This is not a manufactured home, which are used for trailers and mobile homes,” said Johnston, who will live in the house with her husband, David Dickins.

“We’re building a prefab home. … They’re basically house parts. And the parts have to be stronger than a normal house because they have to be transported and lifted by a crane.”

Johnston took a year off to work on the project. She said prefab construction, which has been around for decades but has yet to gain wide acceptance, is more time-efficient. It will take roughly nine months to finish Casabrava, from factory build time to finishes on site. A custom home takes about 18 months to be completed, she said.

“This can really affect the bottom line,” she said.

Savings also come from prefab homes being precision-cut, so there’s less waste. Plus, everything is built indoors, so there are fewer delays.

Building Casabrava will end up costing $220 a square foot, based on Johnston’s figures. The home takes up 4,100 square feet, including a three-car garage. The per-square-footage cost is significantly lower than the per-square-footage cost of an home resold in La Jolla. In July, the median price was $518 a square foot, DataQuick numbers show.

The hard costs of the project, including construction and land but not things like permitting, will total roughly $2.6 million.

Over time, Johnston expects to save money on energy by just the way the home is positioned on the site.

The design is meant to increase ventilation and nix the need for an air conditioner. Other green features include rain-catchment systems to water plants and recycled materials

Homes in Varying Shades of Green

As conscious as consumers have become in recent years of the merits of sustainable housing and the drawbacks of having a large carbon footprint, the fact remains that in all of Westchester County today, there are only two LEED-certified residential projects: a two-family market-rate condominium in Hastings-on-Hudson and a 22-unit affordable assisted-living complex in Yonkers.

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By comparison, according to the United States Green Building Council in Washington, which created the certification process and coined the terminology (LEED is an acronym for Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) the village of Cold Spring, in Putnam County to the north of Westchester, has more than 100 LEED-certified units, among them single- and multifamily, market-rate and income-restricted.

Overall state and national numbers remain modest. There are 1,262 certified LEED for Homes units in New York State; 1,658 in New Jersey; 3,043 in California; and a total of 20,000 in the United States, according to the nonprofit council that administers the LEED for Homes program.

read more at; http://www.nytimes.com/2012/07/15/realestate/westchester-in-the-region-lagging-in-leed-homes.html?_r=1&ref=realestate

House of Future Takes Green to Extreme

Sometime in the early 2000s, when I was a Los Angeles-based national correspondent at the Chicago Tribune, I was assigned to cover the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas. What was most interesting to me was the product designers’ vision of the house of the future.

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The big idea then was accessing music, movies, sports, photos and the Internet from the TV. They were pushing the concept of having multiple screens throughout the house — including one embedded into the door of the refrigerator — so you wouldn’t have to miss a moment of that important game if you didn’t want to wait for the commercial to grab a snack.

Read more at: http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/where-we-live/post/editors-column-house-of-future-takes-green-to-extreme/2012/06/15/gJQAF2U5eV_blog.html

That idea, of course, is long outdated, conceived before the widespread use of smart phones, which now allow you to do all that without spending thousands of dollars to rewire your house. Today’s house of the future focuses not on entertainment, but conservation.

For this week’s cover story, I got an exclusive look at a model home in Waldorf built by KB Home that is aimed at saving owners big bucks in electricity and water costs. The solar-powered, “net-zero” house is designed to produce more energy than it uses and save up to 50,000 gallons of water a year.

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