Green Building

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Are you planning to build or improve a home, cabin, barn, garage, shed, workshop or backyard structure? Are you looking for practical and beautiful do-it-yourself projects? Then you should be getting our Back Home Newsletter. You’ll enjoy seeing fresh designs and reading about design ideas that will help you create the perfect project.

Click here to enter your name and e-mail address to get an absolutely free, no obligation subscription today >>>

The Back Home Newsletter presents free building plans, videos and woodwork projects from a variety of sources. It also covers inexpensive blueprints, do-it-yourself kits and easy-to-use design/build software. Most importantly, it focuses on buildings and projects that are simple and inexpensive to build and to maintain.

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Are you planning on building a new solar home or on adding energy-efficient features to your existing house? Mother Earth News has some design ideas and free building guides that will help.

Mother Earth News, August/September 2002

Even if you’re not planning on building a solar home, there are plenty of energy-saving details that you can incorporate into any home design or add on to your existing home. Passive solar heating and cooling ideas are often common-sense, simple and inexpensive. As an example, using energy-conserving landscaping can save you hundreds or even thousands of dollars in utility bills every year while adding to the value of your home and property.

Mother Earth News magazine has provided solid information on many topics related to sustainable living and natural building for several decades, and now many of these articles are available on-line. I’ve compiled a list of links to some of their best articles on passive solar design, landscaping and retrofitting, by experts like Dan Chiras and Gary Reysa. Combined, the articles add up to a book-length primer on green, energy saving design. They are yours to read and use for free.

Click here to get the Mother Earth News Solar Design Guides >>>

Plan3D is a website that will let you experiment with your solar design ideas before you build. It’s a simple and intuitive CAD program, available by inexpensive subscription, that will help you “build” a three-dimensional model of your home. Then, you can move it in space, test sunlight and shadow angles, and add landscaping, shade pergolas, walks and driveways.

Read more about Plan3D >>>

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The most effective way to save on home construction cost, on the expense of heating and cooling a home and on torture from the tax collector is to build the smallest house that you can be comfortable in. During our recent building boom, everyone wanted big-volume McMansions. It wasn’t cool to build less than five bedrooms, fewer than three parking spaces in the garage, lower than ten-foot high ceilings and dens and kitchens that are not huge enough to shock friends and neighbors.

And, why not? Money was cheap and available everywhere. If you missed all the daily calls from mortgage brokers, you could just fill out applications online. Why not build too much? Every penny put into a home would be paid back by inflation year in and year out. Right?

All right, I guess not. But, it’s very different now. Everyone knows better. That means the “too-much” era is over. Many people are starting to think that it won’t be cool to pay the heating, cooling and tax bills on those behemoths. They are looking to build much smaller, much simpler homes.

The Country Home Journal will continue to feature home plans and building kits in sensible sizes. Some that we’ve reviewed already are tiny by anyone’s standards. I was putting together a list of my favorite web sites for tiny home plans, building kits and prefabs when my friend Dave Noffsinger ( Cherokee Cabin Company ) told me about the Tiny House Blog. Kent Griswold writes about all aspects of tiny home building and living. He’s already put together great lists of design resources, so I’ll just recommend that you go there. Check out the “Links” and “Plans” sections and then enjoy reading his informative articles. Judging by the enthusiastic response Griswold is getting from his readers, I’ll bet that the world will go on without Mini Mansions.

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In 1986, when builder Rich Davis was designing a new home for himself and his wife Beth Zaring, he didn’t think of it as a passive solar design. He was planning to heat the new house with a wood furnace and just wanted less work at cutting and splitting logs. He researched energy efficient design and air tight home details. But, he also got some inspiration from Bruce Anderson’s Solar Home Book.

The 3,000 square home that he built is a marvel of efficiency and a model of what we can do to save energy in our own home designs. Rich and Beth burn just one or two cords of wood each year. That translates to about a quarter of the energy used by most homes of that same size and in a similar climate. Wouldn’t you like to save 75% on your heating bill? Sure, you’d be saving the planet too, but wouldn’t you like to save 75% on your heating bill? And, most of the details that keep the house warm in winter also cut cooling cost in summer.

Here’s how Rich did it. He created an efficient layout: a slightly off-square plan with the longer side facing south, and a stack of three floors. The lowest level is half into a hill, and the upper level is nestled under the roof. He insulated the concrete lower level walls with 4″ rigid foam on the outside surfaces. Exposed areas of foam were protected with a cement stucco finish. Another 1″ of foam insulation was placed below the floor slab. He built 12″ thick walls (two 2×4 walls with a 4″ air space between them) and used 2×12 roof rafters. He stuffed the walls and roof with insulation. Rich paid careful attention to caulking and making sure that the home’s envelope was air tight. He ducted fresh outside air to his wood furnace so that it wouldn’t draw cold air across living spaces from windows and doors.

The Greenhouse Entry - Davis Home, Jackson County, OH

The Greenhouse Entry - Davis Home, Jackson County, OH

The most interesting part of Beth and Rich’s home, and the only component that really supplies solar heat, is the room that they call the Greenhouse. It serves a variety of purposes. First, it’s an air-lock entrance. There are doors into it on the east and west ends that are the main entrances into the house. A big sliding glass door separates the greenhouse from a combination living/dining room. In cold weather, people enter through the greenhouse, but cold gusts of air don’t. Second, it’s a mud room. The masonry floor stands up to the mud from Beth’s garden and goat farm in the summer and snow on boots and skis in the winter. Third, it really is a greenhouse. Beth and Rich start their seedlings there each spring.

Last, and most importantly, it’s a solarium. It’s actually a comfortable sitting room, with no extra heat but the sun’s, on most winter days. The south facing windows warm the space up enough on most days to send heat into the main house.

As you can see in the photo above, Rich built a deep roof overhang to shelter the Greenhouse’s windows. That blocks the rays of the sun when it’s high in the summer sky. That detail, and Venetian blinds, keep the space shady and cooler in summer and early autumn.

So, a series of fairly simple and low-tech details and a functional, multi-purpose sunroom combined for great results. This isn’t a theoretical design. It works. Beth and Rich have been enjoying the benefits for over twenty years. A similar greenhouse/entry/mud room could be added to the south side of many homes, at a fairly reasonable cost. It’s something to think about.

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