My ambitions for making this house green are pretty big, and I'm not sure that I'll be able to fulfill all of them. But I'm knocking on wood (I mean fiberglass). I'll be up front with you about all the costs and obstacles that I face and how my plans for this project may change along the way as a result. Here's a list of my green goals:
- Wrapping the house in insulation to exceed the R-values required by LA City code.
- Installing a grey-water recovery system that also includes rainwater capture.
- Incorporating a solar thermal system for hot water and radiant floor heating.
- Setting up both a photovoltaic and a wind turbine system to supplement electrical energy from the grid.
- Replacing existing windows with Marvin's Integrity line of dual-glazed low-e fiberglass windows.
- Using an underground irrigation system (tied to the grey-water recovery) that drastically reduces runoff and evaporation and, therefore, the amount of water needed to grow a green lawn.
- Improving water conservation through a dual-flush toilet, low-flow shower head and faucets, and a tankless water heater (to be used as a default to the solar thermal system).
- Using LED lights instead of fluorescent or incandescent light bulbs and installing dimmers.
- 80% recycling of hauled debris.
- Painting walls with low or no VOC products.
- Remodeling the kitchen with low-impact appliances and finish material (Energy Star, etc.)
- Having the house certified by LEED and/or Build It Green.
- Cleaned up site (removed debris and dead shrubs).
- Connected with LEED Accredited Professional/architect Shuji Kurokawa and architectural colorist Karen Kurokawa of Impact Design, Inc. (http://www.impactdesigninc.com/) to discuss the remodel.
- Drew plans of existing house, site and proposed changes (no added square footage).
- Engineered underpinning and shear panels.
- Submitted plans to Los Angeles Department of Building and Safety, addressed corrections, and received permits to start the remodel.
The before and after pictures should be quite a sight to see.
ReplyDeleteYes, and the neighbors will be so relieved not to live next to an eysore. Stay tuned for more more pictures.
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