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'Green' Demand Driving Home Technology
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Robert Mechielsen’s designs for environmentally friendly
homes often include cutting edge features such as high-efficiency heating and
cooling systems and solar panels to convert sunshine into electricity.
But he’s only half joking when he says many of the best green home solutions
available to homeowners hail from the 18th century, such as installing awnings
to keep a home cooler.
“
There’s also a very advanced way of using wind technology - it’s
drying your clothes outside,” quips Mechielsen, founder of Studio RMA
in Los Angeles.
With environmental consciousness at an all-time high, homeowners searching
for Earth-friendly ideas don’t have to settle for such rustic measures.
Manufacturers and retailers looking to cash in on the green movement are rolling
out green
home building and remodeling products and demand is helping to drive down costs,
experts say.
Market research by McGraw-Hill Construction earlier this year projects the
residential green building market will have annual sales between $12 billion
and $20 billion
this year. That would represent between 6 percent and 10 percent, respectively,
of the overall homebuilding market.
The firm has said it expects the green building market will double by 2012.
Some of the products are based on new technology, but many are based on concepts
that have been kicking around for decades with relatively few takers, such
as solar water heaters.
That’s changing, thanks in part to soaring energy costs.
Good thing homeowners have more options than ever - without resorting to
hanging their laundry out to dry.
“
It’s a very dynamic time. In 10 years, there’s not going to be such
a thing as green building, just building,” said Sarah Beatty, founder
of Green Depot, New York-based Green Depot, a chain of stores in the Northeast
that
sells green home building products.
At the top of the list for Mechielsen is installing a souped-up version of
an attic ventilator, such as the NightBreeze by David Energy Group, which electronically
manages how evening air circulates into the home, lowering cooling costs.
“
It works on a computer, so people don’t have to open or close their windows,
which is so 18th century,” said Mechielsen, who counts commercial and residential
projects, such as the EcoHouse in Pasadena, CA, among his green building efforts. “It’s
really a big cost-saver.”
Mechielsen also raves about a relatively new generation of solar panel technology
known as thin-film solar. Instead of being made of costly silicon, thin-film
solar cells are made of copper, indium, gallium and selenide. The cells are
thinner and more flexible than existing photovoltaic technology.
Applications for residential use are expected to become available as early
as next year, experts say.
Sometimes the most efficient energy reductions don’t come through technological
wizardry. Up to 25 percent of heating and cooling costs are the result of heat
loss, as air moves in and out of a house through holes, improperly sealed windows
and insufficient insulation.
“
If you’re looking at a home as a system you can start to address low-hanging
fruit that aren’t the sexy solar panels on the roof, but are things like
tightening up the house,” suggests David Johnston, co-author of “Green
From The Ground Up.”
One product increasingly being used in residential building and renovation
projects is closed cell polyurethane foam insulation, which is sprayed between
walls or
in the attic and expands to cover small cracks and other openings through which
heat can escape.
Traditional insulation products can be inefficient or harmful to the environment.
Other green options include insulation sprays made of denim or Cel-Pak, which
is made of recycled newspapers.
“
It’s the first and most cost-effective thing (homeowners) can do,” Johnston
said. “Most people don’t even know they can do that, they just
want to put more pink stuff in the attic.”
Another no-brainer is replacing incandescent light bulbs with more energy
efficient options. LEDs, or light-emitting diodes, remain the latest in efficient
home
lighting technology, but many environmental experts continue to favor compact-fluorescent
lights as a better alternative, saying the LEDs remain too expensive by comparison.
Another criticism is there aren’t many options in terms of light fixtures
that work with LEDs. Johnston says that’s beginning to change and he
expects prices on LEDs to fall dramatically as a result.
Another option for lighting is designed to bring in more natural light without
having to go through the expense of building a full skylight.
Solatube International Inc. of Vista, CA, offers a dome-shaped product that
installs on the roof and uses reflectors to bend light up to 90 degrees into
the house.
“
It literally pushes light into an interior space,” Beatty said. “It
looks like you’re looking outside at the sky.”
Shaun Parvez badly wanted to include a solar energy-powered system or a wind
power generator as part of the extensive expansion and remodel of his home
in Washington Township, NJ.
But the structure, which is going from a one-story, 2,800-square-foot ranch
house into a 2 1/2 story, 10,000 square-foot home, is blanketed with shade
from 100-year-old
oak trees.
One of the many green-friendly options he chose is a smart sprinkler system
to help conserve water use. Such systems were traditionally used to manage
water
use in commercial properties, such as golf courses and nurseries. Now,
manufacturers have been tailoring them for green-conscious homeowners.
Jay Hall, a technical consultant for the U.S. Green Building Council,
says homeowners looking to amp up their green credentials should be
wary of
spending thousands
of dollars on high-end products before they first consider cheaper
upgrades, beginning with buying Energy Star-rated appliances, which can save
up
to 30 percent off electricity costs.
Still, some products, including solar water heaters, are a great option,
Hall says.
Solar water heaters were first invented in the 1970s and 1980s, but
are now becoming more widely available and more efficient.
One type, an evacuated tube solar water heater, uses glass cylinders
to collect solar energy and heat a small copper pipe inside,
which transfers heat to
a manifold filled with water. It helps offset the use of a standard
water heater.
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