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11.26.2009

I (heart) NY - the original green zoning


yep. its actually just a problem when you think suburban - http://www.observer.com/2009/zoning-sustainable-city

The real lesson here isn't that urban is the answer, its that change and policy must be responsive to reality, and in a world where the speed of change keeps increasing - its time to increase the speed of zoning to keep up with what we are actually experiencing - a radical shift towards diversity, information, and collaboration on a scale we have never seen before to repair the system we have created that is destroying the planet.

Sustainability will be about a million small solutions to a big problem, and big change from subtle changes in knowledge and cultural understanding. Like the internet, our human response to restore the ecosystems and economies, protect the poor and the endangered, and discover new ways of living and celebrating being human will be diverse, sometimes conflicted, but i believe ultimately successful at uniting us - perhaps not in a way anyone would have imagined before.

Zoning and planning need to be visionary now - but not static, or totalitarian, like the failed zoning systems of the past and present. The vision will constantly evolve and be flexible enough to accommodate new technologies, economies, climate change, and other unexpected realities, but it cannot remain a dinosaur of stagnation it has been the last 50 years.

its time for something new.

11.11.2009

David Holmgren is pretty much the man.




After listening to this guy on YouTube, i have concluded that this is a guy who really has thought about this and has put his thoughts to practice in his life - something that in my mind always lends credibility to theory.

Here David goes over how he sees suburbia as actually being ideal for permaculture / sustainable agriculture as it already has 'irrigation' infrastructure and houses dispersed in the landscape can utilize impervious surface area to harvest more water, even in drier climates for better growing potential. Or maybe that last part of the sentence is my idea, but this is pretty awesome stuff.

He puts together a myriad of ideas that have surfaced in the last 10 years of my sustainable urban planning research. This guy doesn't really have the 'credentials' to be talking urban planning, but he is on the ground, in the trenches getting it done - so sometimes this brings a certain wisdom.

I was cheering while watching this by myself, given how he kept putting forth concepts that have been in my head for so long and was literally what i have been putting forth from the pulpit for a while! I love this guy!

you need to watch this.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iTYe8WloF1U

Passive Houses use Dirt

found a cool passivehouse website - its a residential project going near Bratislava, Slovakia. It uses euro ventilation systems with local clay walls, brick, and timber for a combination of rad performance with low embodied energy and high potential for reuse of materials - some cool details for you architecture nerds out there--

check it - http://passivehouse.blogspot.com/2007_01_01_archive.html

11.09.2009

Seattle is better than Boulder

Well you liberal, so called green minded boulderites, Seattle now has a new zoning ordinance designed for small scale implementation of affordable housing and diversification through backyard "cottages" or second dwelling units being allowed. Horray! with seemingly simple rules, these structures would be much like Boulder's ADU or OAU program but probably easier to get - which means less barriers to creatively addressing the affordable housing and economic issues facing our building industry in a way that doesn't promote sprawl....

http://www.seattlepi.com/local/411769_cottages02.html?source=rss

On another note, the REBURBIA competition is complete, and while i didn't do an entry due to my workload, i found this series of sketches to be pretty rad and general informative and inspiring --
http://www.re-burbia.com/2009/08/04/sprawl-building-types-repair-toolkit/

7.16.2009

Reburbia Competition - Dwell gets its 'burb on

reburbia....(sounds a little to much like regurgia, which sounds like...hmmmm)


ok remember that I was talking about this before it was cool, like 99, when my thesis on sustainable planning for the front range discussed a new bold model for revamping the suburbs, strip malls and office parks and bringing bikes and people back to the streets.

REBURBIA may see an entry by fuentesdesign if i can find some motivated students or sketchup wizards to do some sick renderings. you can read about this competition aqui.

Lets see some action in denver/boulder!

5.01.2009

Green Zoning - why its important, by Don Fitz

My structural engineer sent this to me, and doesn't know where he found it, so im posting it again for people to read, not sure where it came from, but its a good explanation to why so much of green building is not really getting at the root cause.

by Don Fitz



Deep green building would look at how construction contributes to the root causes of ecological collapse, toxic degradation, global warming and peak oil. Then it would design communities so that people could live comfortably and securely while having the least impact on the environment. The construction of homes would flow from the redesign of communities.

In contrast, shallow green building ignores communities. It views homes as stand-alone objects having no connection to work, shopping, recreation and the many other facets of human life. Shallow green thinking accepts houses pretty much as they are and makes them “green” by adding eco-fads to them.

Many green architects and builders are doing their best to create environmentally friendly homes. But most have a shallow green focus on eco-techniques. They rarely understand that current construction is actually making environmental problems worse.

Look at the web site for the next green builder you see on TV or in the daily paper. Does the site show plans for a home with trees and no parking garage? Or, is it another house plan that tells you how many cars the garage will hold and says nothing about trees?

Wasted energy in homes deserves far more than the scant attention it is receiving. An estimated 43% of US energy goes to buildings. [1] The average US home devotes 51% of its energy to heating and 4% to cooling. [2] Over 90% of energy is produced in nasty ways (coal, oil, gas and nukes) that attack human health, lay waste to ecosystems, and release greenhouse gases.

US building practices in the early 21st century will probably increase CO2 emissions rather than reduce them.

US building practices in the early 21st century will probably increase CO2 emissions rather than reduce them. In 2007, two things happened simultaneously: (a) there was a glut in the housing market; and (b) the US saw more hype for green homes than ever before. The media blitz on eco-houses never grasped the profound absurdity of claiming to benefit the environment by building new “green” homes while thousands of existing homes stood empty.

This brings up the first of 10 ways that the green building fad fails to improve the environment.

1. It ain’t green to ignore perfectly good homes.

Many (if not most) US municipalities have a law prohibiting more than three unrelated people from living in the same house. The single most important green building practice would be to eliminate those laws.


Producing a ton of cement results in the creation of a ton of CO2. New homes take a lot of cement, which means emitting a lot of CO2. What’s the point of building new homes and apartments when so many homes have empty space from grown children moving out or from a spouse dying?

It wasn’t that many decades ago that Americans dealt with issues of isolation and finances by renting out empty space. Or some people got a bigger house for the purpose of renting rooms. Now, that could get you a citation.

This is just one way our grandparents were environmentally friendly without thinking about it. During an eco-house tour, I asked if it had an attic fan, and the builder replied that, no, it would not be energy efficient to circulate hot air through the house. I explained that you should use an attic fan to pull cool air through the downstairs early in the morning and close the windows so it stays 65 to 75 degrees throughout the day. He looked at me like he wasn’t quite sure if such a strange idea would work.

There’s something terribly wrong with “green” building practices that have no memory of traditions like renting bedroom space, designing cross-ventilation, and using fans instead of costly gadgets.

2. It ain’t green to build massive homes.

Alex Wilson wrote that the size of US homes more than doubled between the 1950s and 2003. [3] At the same time, the number of people living in each home decreased, meaning that the average space per person had grown three-fold by the beginning of this century.

Poorly insulated homes of 1500 square feet use less energy than well insulated homes of 3000 square feet.

Wilson shows that eco-practices don’t solve the size problem. Poorly insulated homes of 1500 square feet use less energy than well insulated homes of 3000 square feet. Economies of scale do not make larger homes more efficient per square foot. Bigger homes use proportionally more lumber and other materials due to higher walls and they lose efficiency from longer runs for ducts and pipes.

Stan Cox discovered that many homeowners associations actually require this huge waste by dictating minimum square footage for homes and garages with space for two or more cars. [4] One reason for increased space is that middle class Americans buy (or receive as presents) more and more crap that they use one or zero times and then store until they die and their relatives clean out their home.

There is considerable psychological research showing that increasing the quantity of possessions only leads to big increases in happiness when it helps move people out of poverty After that, there are diminishing returns, with large increases in possessions doing nothing for life satisfaction. [5]

It’s similar with quantity of living space per person. Most Americans grew up in a home where boys shared one room and girls shared another. The trend towards a private bedroom for every child probably has no effect on happiness while harming kids’ ability to share. Excessive space in homes damages the environment and encourages the anti-social value of lavish greed.

3. It ain’t green to encourage urban sprawl.


Builders love to advertise that a home can be designed green for any income range in any location. Really? This thinking reflects a profound disconnect between designing homes and planning urban areas. How can a home possibly be green if its location requires long distance commuting for work, school, shopping and recreation?

To its credit, LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) standards give credit if a new home is built on an existing lot, which encourages use of vacant urban space. This is a positive band-aid, as band-aids go. But aren’t we long past recognizing the huge environmental destructiveness of replacing farms and parks with pavement? Wouldn’t a government seriously concerned with global warming figure out a way to halt it?

4. It ain’t green to build as if space for homes has nothing to do with transportation.

Detroit and St. Louis are some of the worst examples of US cities which have huge vacant areas in the center which are surrounded by vast suburbs. This damages the ability to have an efficient mass transportation system, which requires high density to (a) make sure bus and train cars are full and (b) enable people to walk and bike for most trips.

The vision of neighborhoods without cars, without driveways and without parking spaces does not make it into many design plans.

Oblivious to issues of density, green builders typically advertise how many cars fit into their eco-friendly garages. The vision of neighborhoods without cars, without driveways and without parking spaces does not make it into many design plans.

5. It ain’t green to ignore advantages of multi-family homes.

A few green apartments, condos, co-ops and co-housing units are being constructed. They should be commended. Multi-family homes are clearly the best way to mesh green building with green transportation. They cut land space usage by at least a half — more for taller buildings. This creates more density and/or more green space. Since many people rarely venture into their yards, multi-family homes are likely to have smaller average yard space, but space that is actually used rather than merely serving to sprawl people apart.

Multi-family homes are much more efficient, both during construction and use. There is more sharing of mechanical systems, less building material used, and less heat loss because there is less surface area. Architect Bryan Bowan estimates that just sharing walls “can reduce energy consumption by 20–30%.” [6]

However, some of the most notorious public housing projects were touted as building up to preserve green spaces. It is just as important to ensure that the amount of space per person is not too low as it is to prevent it from going too high. One approach would be requiring condos, apartments, co-housing and co-ops to make 20–30% of their units available to low income families and making sure federal dollars finance it.

6. It ain’t green to pretend that there is no advantage to building underground.

Sometimes it is necessary to build a single family home — especially if there is an empty lot too small for a multi-family unit. But why not take advantage of the more constant temperatures underground? If you’ve ever been in a cave, you know they are naturally “air conditioned” in the summer and naturally warmed in the winter.

The most earth-comforted member of the family is the family car.

Rob Roy uses the groundbreaking ideas of architect Malcolm Wells to describe how to construct “earth-sheltered” homes. By building a house 6 to 8 feet below grade level (for a single story home, a few feet more for two stories), Roy says it “is like moving 1000 miles to the south.” In northern New York, where he lives, earth temperature varies from 40 degrees to 60 degrees. [7]

When I walk around St. Louis, I see new homes going up which universally ignore the benefits of building partially underground. By far, the most typical design for both single-family and multi-family homes is to build the garage as part of the basement. The most earth-comforted member of the family is the family car.

7. It ain’t green to not know what the word “green” means.

You might think that every green builder realizes that “green” means plants and that trees would be an inherent part of the design. Not so. If you tour a green building, notice if the tour guide points out where some trees are placed for summer shading and other trees are placed to break the chilling winds of winter.

This actually happens for some green homes; but as the fad catches on, most builders focus on the latest energy efficiency gadgets. Like attic fans and cross ventilation, the traditional knowledge of trees seems to be fading from architectural memory.

Earth-sheltered homes take “green” to a higher level by growing plants in dirt on the roof. Though earth by itself is not a good insulator, plants do insulate. And earth holds snow, which is a very good insulator. In the summer, rooftop plants offer shade and moisture evaporation cools the roof. The dirt helps protect the home from fire and noise.

8. It ain’t green to protect the environment with one hand while destroying it with the other.

Virtually everyone involved in green building promotes it as the new growth industry. Huh? There will be huge single-family houses built on expansive lots with energy efficient devices which are constructed and transported using fossil fuels. And there will be more each year to help fuel the gross domestic product (GDP) and serve as an extravagant growth model for the rest of the world. If this is how you protect the environment, how would you destroy it?

When you tour a green home, see if there is a sign next to the washing machine connection which says, “Since clothes dryers are the greatest energy hogs and clothes lines work just as well, there is no space for a dryer.” You might look a long time for that sign. Green homes tend to encourage the owner to use as many electricity-based appliances as possible. Though individual gadgets in green homes are more energy efficient, they are part of an overall dynamic which increases the use of electricity each year.

9. It ain’t green to build homes that will not outlast our grandchildren.

The biggest problem with building a green home is that it is a new building. At a recent Green Party forum, I asked if anyone lived in an old home. A few people said they live in a 100- or 110-year-old home. A refugee from the Green Party of Germany then pointed out that an “old” home in Europe was 300, 400 or 500 years old.

Buildings in the US have a life expectancy of 50 years.

Buildings in the US have a life expectancy of 50 years. [8] The Sierra Club wants to reduce energy consumption by 60–80% by 2050. [9] The fact that current construction assumes that homes will last an average of 50 years means that when 2050 is reached, it will be about time to begin replacing the energy efficient homes that are currently being constructed. That’s not energy efficient.

One green home I toured had casement windows which were guaranteed for 10 years. 10 years? If the manufacturer cannot guarantee that windows will endure, how many other parts of the home are designed to fall apart and require energy and resources for replacement? (Maybe we’re supposed to appreciate that replacing the planned obsolescence will be done with great energy efficiency.)

10. Voluntary green ain’t green.

No one who wants to reduce highway deaths advocates that drinking while driving should be voluntary or that everyone should choose whether they drive on the left or right side of the road. The most pathetic aspect of the environmental movement is people parading their lifestyle choices as if individual decisions could ever make the GDP go down instead of up.

If politicians actually believed that there were crises in peak oil and global warming they would spend less time getting their picture in the paper every time a green home is built. Instead, they would be drafting legislation requiring not only energy efficient devices but a whole range of changes in the way space is used for living and transportation.

What would deep green building be?

The first step in deep green building would be rejecting the absurd idea that you can do it one home at a time. The architects and builders I have met seem to be sincere people who are trying to do the best they can. But most jump to expensive green gadgets or efficient systems before looking for low-tech solutions. A more basic problem is seeing the issue as home design rather than city redesign.

Urban structure hamstrings the creation of truly green homes. For example, the absence of efficient mass transportation compels the construction of garages and driveways. It makes no sense to build homes without garages if there is no way to get around without a car.

Cars destroy neighborhoods, which should be the building blocks of city living.

Cars destroy neighborhoods, which should be the building blocks of city living. Urban space should have workplaces, stores, schools, parks and churches located so that most can be reached by bicycling or walking and all can be reached by train or bus. A good goal would be for the average city person to complete 80% of trips by walking or bicycling and 80% of the remaining trips should be reachable by train or bus. This would mean that cars would only be necessary for 4% of trips. (If the figures for most trips were 90% and 90%, cars would only be necessary for 1% of trips.)

If people could get to where they needed to go without a car, they would be vastly more interested in living in a co-op or co-housing unit which had no individual parking spaces and relied on motor pool vehicles that could be reserved for that 4% (or 1%) of trips. The rebirth of neighborhoods based on the drastic reduction in use of cars would fundamentally alter the way homes are designed.

In order to make most trips accessible by walking or bicycling, urban space requires the high density of multi-family homes. People need enough space to be comfortable, but they do not need the gargantuan space of current suburban homes. Society needs to minimize energy utilized in the construction of homes, living in them, and getting around from home to other places.

The very last step of deep green building would be utilizing the many types of eco-stuff that have been introduced in recent years. Just a few of those that are available include heating/cooling systems that use 50% less energy; geothermal systems that utilize temperatures beneath a home; insulating glass; solar panels; solartubes that can provide light to basements from the second floor; and earth building with natural materials or salvaged materials.

The problem is when the eco-gadget tail wags the urban dog. Thinking of green homes as nothing but a sum of eco-gadgets leads to viewing cities as nothing but a sum of eco-homes. The inability to design green neighborhoods means eco-homes actually help perpetuate urban sprawl.

The “shallow green” approach to buildings may look like it is a step in the right direction, but it is not. By failing to come to grips with the economics of growth, current green building practices are increasing the efficiency of components of houses at the same time they contribute to the overall expansion of energy usage, thereby increasing toxic wastes and greenhouse gas emissions.

Building practices that ain’t green have a gadget fetish that is blind to the big picture. Deep green building would focus on low-tech and no-tech solutions. Deep green building would integrate transportation into home design. Deep green building would aim to improve living space while decreasing the gross domestic product, a concept which is anathema to shallow green economics.



Notes

1. Brown, M., Stovall, T., & Hughes, P. Potential carbon emissions reductions in the buildings sector, in Kutscher, C.F. (Ed.) Tackling climate change in the U.S. American Solar Energy Society, 2007. 51-68. http://www.ases.org/climate change

2. Heinberg, R. The party’s over. New Society Publishers, 2003, 148. The rest of home energy goes to water heating, lights and appliances.

3. Wilson, A. Small is beautiful: US house size, resource use, and the environment. Journal of Industrial Ecology, 2005, Vol 9, Nos 1–2, 277–287.

4. Cox, S. The property cops: Homeowner associations ban eco-friendly practices, April 26, 2007. http://www.alternet.org/envirohealth/51001/

5 Jackson, T. Live better by consuming less? Journal of Industrial Ecology, 2005, Vol 9, Nos 1–2, 19–36.

6. Bowan, B. e-mail of June 6, 2007

7. Roy, R. Earth-sheltered homes. Mother Earth News, October/November 2006, No. 218 http://www.motherearthnews.com/Green-Home-Building/2006-10-01/Earth-sheltered-Homes.aspx

8. Swisher, J.N. Potential carbon emissions reductions from energy efficiency by 2030, in Kutscher, 39–49.

9. Sierra Club. Renewable energy experts unveil report. Sierra club press release, January 31, 2007. Contact Josh Dorner, josh.dorner@sierraclub.org

Earth Plaster Recipies by Mark Schuneman

Mark Schuneman's Boulder Straw Bale Home


Mark is pretty much the man - former Colorado Straw Bale Association executive director, straw bale home owner/builder and all around nice guy trying to spread the knowledge and make a difference. Here are the plaster recipes he used on his own home -



Scratch Coat/Body Coat (First layer to be applied directly to strawbales over initial clay slip.)

3:1 (of whatever quantity you use) some records say 9:1 of the listed ingredients
3 tan breeze (unsifted)
1 clay
8 inch straw mixed in quite thickly


Brown Coat (second layer: mostly to create a more even and distilled surface over body coat.

4 sifted or screened breeze (lath screen)
2 sand (masonry is perfect because of its variegated particles)
½ bucket clay
1 medium sized can of ready made wet wheat paste (24 ounces)
2 buckets of packed chopped straw

*Notes; mix is best on the wetter side versus the dryer side. Also, medium sized bucket was used to measure quantity for this batch. 2 ½ gallons is the size quessed.

Box Beam Mix

2 breeze
1 Clay
Lots of straw

Straw Clay

Same as above; but wetter
Drizzle mix over 8 inch ~ 9 inch size straw ( cut bale in half)
til the yellow has mellowed

Palate Stuffing Material

Cut bale in half

3 breeze
1 clay
Mix to watery consistency

Drizzle over 8~9 inch straw til yellow color is coated with mixture

Adobe Block

3 breeze
1 ½ clay
2 sand
lots of 8 ~ 9 inch chopped straw

Adobe Block Sponge Float Mix

4 1/8 inch screened breeze
1 silica #50
1 silica #90 200 ml #641 Davis Pigment 10 cups water
1 ½ Kaolin
½ carnation
Adobe Mortar Mix

8 breeze
4 sand
1 clay
½ carnation

Exterior Brown (color) Coat

2 water
3 breeze
300 ml #160 Davis Pigment
1 straw
1 Bugler can cooked wheat paste
1 sand (masonry- no sifting)
3 breeze (structural fill ~ pioneer sand = 6 total)
2 fine chopped straw

Exterior sponge float color coat (Final finish)

Screen above mix (Ext. Brown Color Coat)through metal lath

Interior Finish Plasters

Main Floor Living Room (104 G)

3.75 l Silica #50
3.75 l Silica #90
6.75 l Kaolin
500ml dry wheat paste
500 - 750 ml carnation
500 ml #40310 pigment
250 ml #40040 pigment
62.5 ml #641 Davis
62.5 ml # 5447 Davis
62.5 ml #5844 Davis
5 liters water + season to taste

Kitchen (Laura’s Recipe)

4 liters water
2 liters #17050 (Kremer Pigment)
250 ml cayenne
500 ml yellow ochre (Mile Hi)
7 liters kaolin
500 ml dry wheat paste
3.75 liters silica #50
3.75 liters silica #90

Stairwell (use main floor living room mix for color: see above)

3.75 liters silica #90
3.75 liters silica #50
6.75 liters Kaolin
4 ounces dry wheat paste
¾ carnation
1 liter main floor mix color

Base Breeze Mix (closets)

10 liters breeze
500 ml casein
5 liters kaolin
5 ml borax
5 liters #50 silica
350 ml wet wheat paste
5 liters #90 silica

Mater Bedroom (#152)

4 liters silica #50
4 liters silica #90
7 liters kaolin
500 ml dry wheat paste
500 ml carnation
1 liter #5447 pigment
500 ml #40040 Kremer pigment
750 ml #641 Davis
5 liters water

North Media Wall & Laundry

Same mix as #142
Same sand, kaolin, wp, carnation but color is 1 liter of mix 142

West Bedroom (#132)

3.75 liters silica #50
3.75 liters silica #90
6.75 liters kaolin
500 ml dry wheat paste
500 ml carnation
1 liter #5447 Davis pigment
750 ml #40040 Kremer
250 ml #641 Davis
5.5 liters water

East Bedroom (#152)

3.75 liters silica #50
3.75 liters silica #90
6.75 liters kaolin
500 ml dry wheat paste
500 ml carnation
1 liter #5447 Davis pigment
750 ml #40040 Kremer
750ml #641 Davis
5.5 liters water

Powder Room (#201)

3.75 liters silica #50
3.75 liters silica #90
7 liters kaolin
500 ml dry wheat paste
500 ml carnation
1.5 liters Bioshield #201 or Kremmer # 17050
500 ml 40040 Kremmer
250 ml cayenne
500 ml yellow ochre (Mile Hi Ceramics)
5 + liters water

Upstairs Bathroom

4 liters silica #50
200 ml Dry wheat paste
500 ml #40310 Kremmer
4 liters silica #90
500 ml carnation
200 ml cayenne
5 + liters water
7 liters kaolin
1 liter #40040 Kremmer
500 ml #5447 Davis

3.10.2009

Community Roots: A case study of culture change in action

Kipp Nash is pretty much my new hero. Growing vegetables in people's suburban yards is part of the great transformation we need!

Checkout the www.communityrootsboulder.com.

Kipp Nash and some young gardeners making it happen!

Yes, more green zoning on FORA.tv

I know, you want me to write something and not just post fora.tv videos, but consider the fact that i listen to these like 4 hours a day, and you know you're getting only the best from me, with love.

This is about urban planning - this is about carbon reduction on a massive scale - this argument must be understood to accept an urban future for populations rather than the suburban version we have largely built in the west with some minor exceptions.

This is about building cities for people, not cars. We have to stop sprawl now, and start reinvesting in our existing cities so they produce food, clean the water and air, and build soil. Cities should support our health, nourish culture, and grow habitat as well as the economy. This is the future.

3.02.2009

Solar Hippies from the 70's now working with Obama

Thats right, Ed Mazria, solar architect from the 70's that i read in college is now talking with the Obama administration (John Podesta, president and CEO, Center for American Progress and co-chair of the Obama-Biden Transition Project). Check out the video. The intro is a little dry, but the tofurky is in the middle.

2.26.2009

S-House - the passive Straw Bale House


Saw an article today saying "Brown is the new Green" - the argument being that green has been corporatized so deeply that it no longer represents the true social and ecological justice movement. Greenwashing, plain and simple, is in full effect.

The author suggested the color of the earth itself as a color that would be uninteresting to corporate marketing, but would symbolize global unity and our origins from the soil.

In our straw bale building community, we have often joked about being the "brown" building guild - simply because we didn't see DOW chemical rigid foam (although we do use this product below grade) as an ecological product, even if it was colored green and being sold and promoted as an energy saving, green building product. LEED and the USGBC have made incredible inroads into mainstream building culture with their rating systems - and the G in USGBC has been adopted by culture at large it seems here in the USA.

Also, solar, geothermal, air sealing, heat recovery ventilation, and other high tech aspects of high performance building are, in my opinion truly environmental approaches, and not all natural buildings use these technologies appropriately, as there is still in my view, a rift between what i call "conventional green building" i.e. LEED, and natural building, or "brown" building.

Here in boulder we have the 7000 sf foam insulated green mcmansions, with 10kW of PV, 50K in geothermal or solar hot water, and 100k in high performance windows - which in my mind is akin to the Escalade Hybrid. While these buildings use the latest in green technology, and provide efficient, "net zero" energy living, healthy indoor air, and durable finishes and structure, they might employ workers below the living wage, use a ton of petroleum, isolate the owners from the community and vice versa, and have embodied energy in the materials of the building that are off the charts.

Conversely, the eco-hippie straw bale shacks in the mountains might require lots of driving to get to the off-grid, structure that might have indoor air quality problems, or still use propane or wood burning rather than an HRV and solar thermal. They might have recycled windows instead of buying new high performance ones that cause the whole system to perform poorly.

There are levels of deeper "green" or "brown" depending on which color you see as most fitting, but both need to be integrated. One of my favorite projects is the S-house in Austria, which combines low embodied energy, community building, straw bale with earthen plasters (accessible to lots of people in the world, vs. DOW XPS foam insulation) with HRV, super air tight passive house standards.

See s-house.at

2.21.2009

Saul Griffith - Secretary of Mind Boggling Numbers

.... on Climate change and watts -

some great numbers for perspective - and making the case for smaller, smarter, lower carbon homes.

2.18.2009

Passive House Standard could be adopted by the European Union- should the US be next?

passive homes in Germany



Ive decided to take a week and go to Germany for the passivehouse conference in May.

This standard might be adopted by the EU for ALL new buildings - 10 times more efficient than a code building in this country. If americans use 25% of the worlds resources, and buildings use approximately 50% of our energy, and we cut that by an order of magnitude, it would have a massive impact on our energy costs as well as carbon emissions, and it would put a lot of people to work rebuilding everything we have built for the 21st century. Read here about the EU adoption.

Energy efficiency and renewable energy will be the key to our recovery as a nation.

2.16.2009

Dwell Magazine, Six packs, and GREEN zoning. yes.


Whats up now?

Dwell, March 2009, page 70

Aussie ecocool architecture firm Environa Studio says the single family, stand alone house is out, and they are replacing single family homes with "six packs" or six apartments, or row houses, or whatever- modern, prefab, cool buildings that are smaller and thus affordable and more efficient. bring this kind of zoning to boulder and it will be six packs and singletrack for Brian every day!

Passivhaus by Guido Wimmers

Listen to Guido here -

http://bldgsim.wordpress.com/2008/07/16/guido-wimmers-on-passivhaus-design/


Having attended the passivehouse.us conference in 2007, I have been trying to make all my projects close to the passive house standard, roughly 10 times more energy efficient than a building in this country. This last 10% is easily met with renewables, photovoltaics, solar hot water or geothermal. Constant fresh, filtered air is brought to temperature by an energy recovery ventilation system - etc.

This is how my house will be built this year, when i remodel my 110 year old stone building to meet passive house standards here in boulder.

www.fuentesdesign.com

Sanyo double hit panels get 20% more power and save some coin on roofing:

www.fuentesdesign.com


This was on ecoshock radio:

http://www.ecoshock.org/eshock08.html

2.15.2009

2.14.2009

Sustainable is out, Resilient is IN

The word sustainable has seemingly been left behind of late (as W. McDonough says, would you think your marriage was good if you described it as sustainable?). Green is the new buzzword, and is really already so 2007 thanks to greenwashing, and general overuse. In the search for new sound bites, restoration and resilient are a few of the new angles I find interesting.

Resiliency, or the idea of a city, town, country or ecosystem being able to sustain damage and still function, is a test of the new designs we propose, either in an effort to restore local ecological systems, our towns, cities or the economy.

Climate change will dramatically affect everywhere on earth, this is inevitable according to most everyone studying the issues - so the question becomes how will we best prepare for these changes?

In my green zoning quest - i came upon this Resilient Cities: Responding to Peak Oil and Climate Change. Its fueling my fire to move forward rapidly with rethinking our neighborhood and city planning policies-its time to really consider an altered future in terms of climate, oil availability, and energy use.

2.08.2009

Denver is better than Boulder (as far as green zoning goes)

Well, Boulder is supposed to be progressive, but Denver beat me to it - green zoning is happening there with their new zoning simplification - now all we have to do is copy Denver! YOU HEAR ME BOULDER?? You got "out-progressived" by my hometown. check out the Rocky Mountain News article.

2.05.2009

ED MAZRIA architecture 2030

i read this guy in college, now hes out beating the drum and getting it done. zero energy buildings everywhere by 2030 - 50% of our nations energy is buildings - we have the technology to eliminate it now, our small little projects are doing it right now.

Check out the video on EETV:

http://www.eenews.net/tv/video_guide/929

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2.02.2009

one idea is....

I reserved this domain name with the idea to bring people together to transform zoning to recreate all our existing neighborhoods in a green manner - and have hopes that the future of what i do with this will be interactive and more interesting, but to start it off, ill record my initial concept -

1 - to allow more than three unrelated people to live in the same house in boulder -
2- to make the Boulder zoning code for Accessory Dwelling Unit / Owner's accessory unit's easier to accomplish (make them possible on every single family lot)

those two things alone i believe would -

1- provide affordable housing in boulder
2- stimulate the local building economy for small contractors immediately
3 - increase diversity in existing neighborhoods
4- reduce VMT for people who would like to live in boulder but can't afford to
(given assumption that these units could be added avoidably)

1.28.2009

Your Carbon output on today's FORA.TV

my fora.tv addiction continues today with

http://fora.tv/2009/01/16/Saul_Griffith_Climate_Change_Recalculated

some awesome math on climate change.

met with a lot of people last night at green drinks boulder, a lot of interest in green zoning - affordable housing, smaller homes, zero energy building, diverse community, and a way to stimulate the local building economy! This is my forum for getting everyone together to work towards something better than what we have - if you believe what we have now is the best of all possible worlds, go enjoy it!

http://www.greendrinks.org/index.php?country=USA&city=Boulder

1.27.2009

Green Zoning is here!

After writing my college thesis on sustainable urban planning for the front range of colorado, starting my own successful ecological architectural company, and not seeing the green zoning happen that is required to really do green building right, i am starting this site to connect everyone local who is interested in a more progressive future than suburbs, strip malls, and industrial and office parks!