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Before green was
mainstream, environmentally friendly home styles had a kind of chunky utility.
They were obviously different than regular houses and were probably thought by
some to be the kind of homes you might find on a commune or ones only hippies lived
in. But not anymore. Green homeshave
come a long way from the prototypes (and stereotypes). Today's contemporary
eco-responsible homes have an elegant usability that combines the best of the
old with the technologies of the new.
While
most any home can be made green with updates -- and with some due diligence on
the part of the owners -- some residential styles lend themselves to being
eco-friendly by design. And though it's taken decades to get there, if you're
building or choosing a home, green options are within your reach. You can have
an environmentally friendly, eco-responsible or even zero-footprint house, depending on how much you want
to dedicate in money and lifestyle changes in order to steward the planet and
its resources.
Not
ready for an all-solar shed with a living roof and nothing but a bike parked
outside? Take a look at some other eco-friendly options that are as attractive
as they are comfortable.
- 10 - Earth Sheltered
Living in
earth-sheltered housing doesn't have to mean sharing your space with the worms. With designs that
are partially below ground or completely above ground, earth-sheltered housing
is adaptable and takes advantage of the energy efficiency of the surrounding
soil and plant life. Architect Malcolm Wells advocated and promoted the
earth-sheltered architecture until his death in December 2009 [source: Weber].
He designed multiple underground homes, stadiums, airports and even bridges,
and though many never came to fruition, they did forever influence the green
movement [source: Weber].
One
earth-sheltered design that has taken hold today is the bermed
home. It is built at ground level or dug into the hillside and has
earth compacted around two sides, the top/roof and along the rear. Homes like
these have sub-ground living areas with central atriums or large courtyards
that provide natural light, cool air andinsulation.
According
to the U.S. Department of Energy, elevational bermed homes, usually those
situated partly in the ground with a south-facing wall open to sunshine and
heat, may be the most affordable options in earth-sheltered housing. They're
easier to construct and often are built into hillsides, taking advantage of
natural surroundings. Underground earth-rammed homes may be more costly, but
they're not covered with as much earth as you might think -- typically less
than 3 feet (0.9 meters). Using more than 3 feet doesn't increase energy
efficiency [source: U.S. Department
of Energy].
- 9 - Recycled Modern
For decades,
"weird," "amazing" and "unusual" homes found
their way into the spotlight because of their non-traditional make up. Bottles
and cans, old tires, and other trashed and found items became building
materials for recycled architecture. Many of these structures are green because
they reuse available items, but often they go further by incorporating other
eco-friendly ideas. And though some are quirky and funky by design, others have
an air of elegance because of their finished details and traditional
craftsmanship.
A recycled modern
home doesn't have to
be made of 6 million empty beer bottles, as is the case with La Casa
de Botella in Argentina, but planning a house that embraces irregular sizes and
design in order to use recycled materials is realistic without having to be
extreme or newsworthy [source: Alvarado].
Directories published in the United States and Canada by the Building Materials
Reuse Association (BMRA) help builders find local sources for deconstructing
and reconstructing -- taking good care to preserve materials you're taking down
and selecting reuse materials for building up.
Building
with roof rafters from an old factory or insulating walls with old denim are
less visible possibilities, and if you still want to use an old ship's bow for
a front porch, anchors aweigh.
- 8 - Domed and Organic
A forerunner in
promoting environmentally friendly architecture was engineer Buckminster
"Bucky" Fuller. He sought to realize the idea of "doing more
with less," and in building design, he tried to popularize the half-circle
geodesic dome. Made up of interconnected triangles, which use a minimum of
materials to create an open space for living, the domes were thought to be
ideal because of their low cost and sturdiness [source: Black Mountain
College].
An
earlier form of semi-sphere living was the yurt, which goes back
thousands of years to traditional Mongolian tent living. With circular walls
built up in one layer or many layers of circles, a yurt is kind of a strong
tent that survives harsh conditions and has a simple set up.
Both
of these forms are organic, borrowing from the design of natural forms on the
Earth and in the body -- such as cells -- and they use fewer materials. Yurts,
domes and other organic forms are not the most traditional choice in
contemporary eco-friendly housing, but manufacturers in North America sell
homes in the style of domes and tents in an affordable range. And in some parts
of Asia and Africa this traditional style is still the most popular, sturdy and
economical choice.
- 7 - Prefab and Tract
As the need for
affordable, well-made and energy-efficient housing increases through
challenging economic times, and as families learn more about the toxins in the
very materials that surround them at home, some eco-conscious developers are
buying in bulk and buying green to keep costs down and fill a market need.
Tract housing units in
states ranging from Arizona to Washington to New York have been finding
investors and buyers who are building eco-friendly from the ground up. Builders
who still get behind the ease and low cost ofprefabricated
housing also have shown
green growth by adding options for energy efficiency and non-toxic features in
their pre-built cottage, solar and modular home packages.
Though doing some
research into the green claims of companies marketing tract and prefab is
advisable, there is one quality that many of these companies seem to have in
common: You get more energy efficiency and make a smaller footprint on the
environment, and you will likely get a smaller house, too.
- 6 - Pueblo and Adobe Revival
Most people associate
adobe- and pueblo-style with hot, dry areas such as the Southwestern United
States, Mexico, and parts of Africa and the Mediterranean. The homes built with
adobe blocks or bricks made of a clay,
water and sand mixture can last hundreds of years, and they provide excellent
insulation from hot and cold weather, even though they're more widely found in
warm, arid climates [source:Encyclopaedia
Britannica]. Having adequate and regular sunshine to keep the adobe
dry and to allow it to store heatenergy
is a must. Adobe has a low R-value, meaning it doesn't insulate as well outside
of its ideal, dry and sunny environment, but its thick make up is very
eco-friendly in terms of keeping the heat out [source: U.S. Dept of
Energy]. In cold climates, it's possible to add insulation and
counter any moisture, though it makes more sense to work with other materials
more suited for the environment [source: Roberts, et al.]
Adobe-
and pueblo-revival continue to be most popular in warm regions, and what makes
them "revival" is they combine traditional clay materials and newer
insulating and strengthening ingredients like concrete and paper composites,
and sometimes applied exterior plasters, as well. Although the revival in this
style started back in the 1920s and '30s, it has continued into the 21st
century with its characteristic simple lines, central courtyards and wooden
architectural details often with modern tweaks and varied rooflines.
- 5 - Rammed Earth
Stacks of dried out
muddy-looking rectangles with a dirt smell and crumbly corners might be one way
people imagine rammed-earth
construction. However, centuries-old European homesteads, ancient
Asian landmarks, and modern, sleek and efficient Western designs stand up
against this stereotype. Crude forms of rammed-earth building in impoverished
areas of the world do usually lack the polish of contemporary styles, but most
share an amazing longevity and energy-efficiency.
Rammed-earth
construction is simply the use of soil -- with a weighted mix of clay and sand -- packed super tight into brick form
or packed up in layers within wooden molds to form walls. These blocks and
walls are at minimum about 12 inches (30 centimeters) thick, but can be twice
that, and they often have added external treatments to increase insulating
properties and durability against weather extremes [source: Encyclopaedia
Britannica]. Untreated walls are hardy too, but depending on the
climate, modern techniques, such as moisture barriers or strengthened concrete
mixes, can improve resilience.
Building
a rammed-earth structure will lower energy consumption and costs, but due to
the time, labor and transport involved, costs are much higher than in
traditional homebuilding [source: California
Energy Commission]. Working with local building codes for this unusual
building type adds some work too, but long-term and possible lifelong energy
savings in an Earth-friendly, earth-filled home may balance the initial time
and costs.
- 4 - Multi-family Eco Units
Living with shared
walls or common spaces and interacting with neighbors isn't for everyone, but
like-minded renters and homeowners might be heading toward more planned and
communal properties, bringing social lives and work closer to where they
actually live. A January 2011 study sponsored by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's
Smart Growth Program finds that one of the factors that would significantly
decrease energy consumption is to focus building and community planning on
multifamily or attached housing with shared walls that hold in more heat and
increase efficiency [source: EPA].
Building homes closer together and closer to public transit options -- and with
more energy-efficient construction -- could reduce consumption up to 64 percent
compared to single-family, remote suburban homes that rely heavily on car
travel [source: EPA].
Having
a single-family home without shared walls is a dream and long-term goal for
many, but condos, row houses and cohousing offer options for private ownership
and shared responsibility for resources. Some have the added initiative of
being responsible to each other in communities as part of the stewardship.
Sharing a wall with a neighbor isn't what it used to be. For many, it's a
preference and obvious choice toward a smallerfootprint and a return to knowing their
neighbors.
- 3 - 21st-century/Mid-century Modern
Many people in the West
have grown up living in and visiting homes with lots of small rooms connected
by narrow hallways, with little connection to the outdoors. But mid-century
modern homes were different -- they had open plans, more natural flooring, and
interior courtyards or sheer walls and glass sliders to the outside. Houses
from the 1960s by architecture firms like Eichler Homes continue to be hot
commodities, and many 21st-century,
eco-friendly designs have been inspired by the clean lines and efficiency of
this style. With well-joined building envelopes, often achieving a hermetically
sealed feel, and the circulation of free-flowing spaces and ventilation -- some
with movable walls and tracks for true indoor-outdoor living -- this
mid-century modern redux is bringing modern eco-technology to a treasured
design style.
Another
twist is the adaptation of mid-century
modern to multi-unit
residential design. Housing developments from the Netherlands to South America
show the influence of mid-century modern open planning but in a stacked, urban
housing form that departs from the apartment style of connected, closed off
small boxes. Greening this multi-unit building is breathing new life into this
common housing design.
- 2 - Small or Tiny
Downsizing isn't
something desirable in the workforce and often it's something brought on by
circumstances and not by choice, but for the eco-conscious, it's often a
conscious and deliberate move. Criticism of "McMansions," those
super-huge, mostly soul-less and resource-wasteful houses of the suburbs have
given way to more and more coverage of small, tiny and even micro-homes. Living
in small spaces is a necessity for most city-dwellers in high-density areas
like Hong Kong and New York City, but many people are exploring building and
buying small in order to live more simply and with fewer drains on resources.
Sometimes, though, the environmental benefits are just a result of homeowners
wanting to pay less for utilities and shorten their commutes, making downsizing
good for the wallet, too.
Economic
downturns lead to downsizing as well, and according the U.S. Census Bureau, the
size of newly built single-family homes decreased between 51 and 200 square
feet (4.7 and 18.5 square meters) from 2008 to 2009, making the national
average about 2,400 to 2,500 square feet (223 to 232 square meters) [source:Heavens]. Those weathering the economic
downturn in Japan also have turned to even smaller spaces, with closet-sized
houses and "ultra-tiny" designs growing in popularity [source: Lah].
Some
families, however, make a very deliberate decision to live in smaller spaces to
be more eco-friendly and to help other families in the process. The Salwen
family from Atlanta, for example, sold their house, bought one half its size
and used the remaining money to help those in need in Ghana [source: Salwen]. As one of the principles of being
environmentally friendly is to lessen negative impacts on the planet --
including its people -- the Salwens lowered their consumption and improved the
conditions of others with the money they saved.
- 1 - Hybrid, Custom, Evolving
If you've read articles
on people who live in $200, 24-square-foot (2.23-square-meter) shacks made from
junk or who sleep in capsule hotel rooms the size of old phone booths, you
might have wondered if these are the wave of the future [source: Wadler].
People in London, Mexico City and the United States are using old shipping
containers as homes, and the Keetwonen student dorm complex in
Amsterdam is a veritable village of containers used to house more than 1,000
university students [source: Open Architecture Network].
Just
as mid-century modern designs by Joseph Eichler in the 1960s didn't take off
wildly during their time, but have since become models for reproducing and
gleaning the best of their kind, some of what we see today as wacky may lead to
practical innovations in mainstream green, environmentally friendly housing.
Architects and designers coming into their own today have grown up with the
greening of architecture, so it's likely to be less of an afterthought and more
a part of good, holistic housing of the near future, with or without the
miniature size, high cost and funky functionalism.
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