Green Tips With Pat: Energy Efficient Windows

15 08 2011

Energy Savings
Energy efficient windows in the winter can reduce the amount of heat that is lost through the glass. This means the furnace doesn’t have to run as much. In the summer, energy efficient windows can cut down on the amount of solar radiation allowed into homes. This means the air conditioner does not have to run as much. By cutting down on the time the heating and cooling appliances have to work, this reduces utility costs.

Improved Comfort
When there is less heat loss or heat radiation through the windows, homes are more comfortable. There are not any cold drafts or hot spots in the house.

Reduced Fading
The new coatings on energy efficient windows block out the harmful ultraviolet rays, which cause fading. Coatings on the E-glass can reduce the UV rays by 98 percent. This will save material and woods from losing their bright original colors.

Quieter Homes
Energy efficient windows block out outside noise. The better quality of materials and installation provide a better quality of sound insulation.

Less Condensation
In cold climates, energy efficient windows stay warmer, so windows stay dryer. With reduced condensation, mold and mildew are not a problem around windows. This saves curtains and paint from being damaged.

Aesthetically Pleasing
Energy efficient windows allow light and the views of the outdoors to brighten any home without worrying about heat loss or cooling loss. In addition, when energy efficient windows are built of quality materials, they add value and charm to any room. Energy efficient windows create an attractive decorative touch to any room in the house.





Green Agents: Growing Roots in Today’s Market

19 07 2011

If you’re one of the lucky few planning to buy a home next year and trying to live environmentally friendly, now you can find a house through a “green” real estate agent.

Not to be confused with one who’s just earned his or her license, a so-called eco-broker is a real estate pro who has passed a certification course on energy efficiency, indoor air quality and “green” mortgages, among other topics.

“It’s a growing area of study for Realtors,” says Brad Sandler, an agent in San Diego. “In the past, you counted on your real estate agent to know about home values, not energy values. But now the energy footprint of the house is critical to its value.”

So when you find that dream home, your eco-broker can act as a kind of energy consultant to give you ideas on environmentally positive improvements. He or she can also lead you to green homes for sale and help make your current home more marketable with energy-saving recommendations.

“If my clients are looking at a house that has the standard two-inch insulation inside the walls, I tell them how much they can save on their utility bills if they were to increase it and add a programmable thermostat,” says Sandler.

The boost in value from making energy-related improvements can be significant. “Take two identical homes on a street, and one has made some energy-efficient changes and the other hasn’t,” says Tom Severino, a Realtor and environmental engineer in West Chester, Pa. “The home with the improvements might have a monthly utility bill $50 less than its neighbor and be worth an additional 5% to 10% on the market.”





Energy Efficient Windows: What do you know about them?

19 07 2011

According to the U.S. Department of Energy, leaky and inefficient windows, skylights and doors account for up to 25 percent of the average household’s energy bills. Some sources estimate as high as 40 percent. A lot depends on where you live:

  • Cold climates lose energy in the form of heat
  • Hot climates lose energy in the form of cooling

The colder or hotter the climate, the greater your heating or cooling costs and the greater potential you have to save money on energy costs. Nearly everyone can benefit by replacing leaky, inefficient windows with modern energy-efficient windows. Depending on your location, you can cut energy costs by as much as 15 percent.

A Smart Investment

Energy Performance RatingsNFRC Label

Replacing all of a home’s windows can be a big investment. The good news is, it’s an investment that can pay for itself in just a few years. Here’s how:

  • Improves curb appeal and increases resale value. According to the 2008/09 Cost vs. Value Report (a combined effort by Remodeling magazine and REALTOR®magazine), homeowners can expect to recoup about 93% percent for vinyl or wood window replacement.
  • Reduces heating and/or cooling costs, which saves you money every year.
  • Increases the comfort of your home.
  • Can qualify you for rebates and tax incentives. Check for rebates and tax incentives in your area.

To find out more about the many benefits of energy-efficient windows, visit the Efficient Windows Collaborative. The window selection tool on this site helps determine an approximate change in annual energy use given your home type, window type and geographic region.





Old Homes Going Green: Worth the Trouble?

18 07 2011

I found this article on a blog called “Historic Home Blog”. I thought it was interesting and wanted to share it. Click Here 

Whether it’s a cozy urban bungalow or a rambling Georgian mansion, renovating old houses is one of the best things homeowners can do for the environment. Not only are they preserving the cultural heritage and craftsmanship of a bygone era, they’re eliminating the environmental impact of constructing a new house. As preservation architect Carl Elefante of Quinn Evans Architects in Washington, D.C., puts it, “The greenest building is the one you don’t build.”But sustainable historic preservation can be tricky, as anyone knows who has tried insulating a drafty Victorian without destroying original plaster walls or leaded windows. Renovating an old house usually entails some sacrifice of the original structure to create a healthy, energy-efficient environment — but not as much as you might think.RELEARNING OLD LESSONS

Much of what we think of as modern green design was taken for granted a century ago, when most homes were built with local and recycled materials, reflective roofs, permeable walkways, operable windows, proximity to public transportation and natural-energy heating sources. “Greenbuilding is nothing new. We’re just relearning old lessons,” says Walter Sedovic, a New York architect who specializes in both historic preservation and sustainable design, and is certified by the U.S. Green Building Council’s LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) program.

Alas, what works for building new green homes doesn’t always work for renovating historic ones. Preservationists complain that sustainable design advocates often promote new building at the expense of preservation and adaptive reuse. Even the term “sustainable building” seems to refer to new construction. “In most of the English-speaking world, historic preservation is called ‘heritage conservation,’ so there’s a direct parallel with resource and environmental conservation,” points out Mike Jackson, chief architect of the Illinois Historic Preservation Agency.

Many traditional materials and assemblies are not acknowledged by current greenbuilding standards. “Timber, for example, is considered inconsistent and prone to insect damage by today’s standards, but it’s actually far more resilient alone than with steel added [as braces and connectors], which makes it rigid,” Sedovic explains. “Buildings need to move with the seasons.”

Likewise, lime mortar and old bricks are softer, less consistent and more malleable than modern cement and bricks, qualities that have allowed old buildings to survive, Sedovic says, even through hurricanes. “There is a fallacy that stronger is better,” he says, “but with historic buildings, the ‘weakness’ of traditional materials is better suited to last for centuries.”

Going for the green in a historic home is, in many ways, the antithesis of achieving the solar-paneled modern house. Green preservation is all about invisible sustainability. “People want to say, ‘Aha! That’s the sustainable house, right there!’” says Sedovic. “But when it comes to a green historic home, what you will see is not something readily identifiable, just a traditional building doing what it was originally designed to do.”

HERITAGE ZONES

When undertaking a restoration project, it helps to divide the home into three levels of historic value, or heritage, according to Jackson. “Most important in terms of preservation is the front, the part visible to the world, and historical features just inside the front door like the fireplace, pocket doors and ceiling medallions,” he says. Original windows and exterior surfaces in this zone should be preserved if at all possible.

The sides and back of a house are considered a secondary zone, where materials like siding and windows are replaceable if necessary. The third zone is the part of the house that is invisible to the outside world, such as basements and attics, where alterations don’t affect the home’s historic appearance.

As long as it works aesthetically with the rest of the house, a kitchen can usually be updated without destroying heritage. “If you’re looking at a house built in 1900 with a kitchen from the 1970s, that history was already altered,” says Jackson. “People tend to remodel kitchens every 15 years, and the cycle is getting shorter. What you do with the kitchen is a modern question, not an authenticity question.”

Trying to make a home energy efficient is where preservation and green design objectives typically clash. But lighting and heating upgrades often can be done with minimal damage to historic features if major alterations take place in attics and basements, the least visible zone. Also, if there is sufficient space between lathe and frame, you can pump foam or cellulose insulation into the chambers behind plaster walls.

“With historic homes, the biggest issue is with windows and walls,” says Stephen Farneth, a principal at the Architectural Resources Group in San Francisco. “How do you insulate the wall assembly if the interior finishes are really outstanding? Sometimes we don’t. We find other ways of conserving energy.”

Insulating in that third zone, especially the attic and basement, should be the first step of any green restoration. Pay particular attention to the sill plate, the point where the frame meets the foundation, a notoriously leaky point in old houses. Use caulk and expanding foam where possible.

An energy audit by a utility company or energy contractor can help pinpoint trouble spots using infrared photography and/or a blower door test, in which a powerful fan device is set up in an exterior doorway to create a strong draft inside the house, making it easy to identify air leaks in the building envelope. “Owners of historic homes can cut 25 to 35 percent off their heating bills by doing an energy audit, then insulating attic and basement,” says Jim Cavallo, an energy auditor and associate editor of Home Energy magazine. Cavallo notes that he charges between $350 and $500 for an energy audit, depending on house size.

MYTHS ABOUT WINDOWS

Leaded and stained glass windows are integral to the character of an old house. Unfortunately, they are frequently as drafty as they are charming. Replacing them with vinyl or aluminum windows can drastically change the appearance of a historic house, but many people assume this is the only solution. Everyone knows double-glazed panes beat leaky, century-old singles, right?

Actually, the draft has only partly to do with glass. “At least half the problem is in the way the window meets the sash and wall structure,” says Sedovic. “Often, manufacturers’ claims of efficiency are actually a measure of the glass, not the window unit. As a result, poor choices are made relative to the expense and aggravation of doing window replacements.”

Preservationists sometimes suggest installing storm windows on the interior in order to maintain the outer appearance of original windows facing the street. However, replacement windows have pushed storm windows out of the marketplace, so you might have to look beyond your local home improvement store to find good ones.

Wooden storm windows such as the storm-and-screen combination sold by Marvin Windows and Doors are effective and authentic-looking. Less expensive options include weather-stripping and insulating wood frames with spray insulation, and reglazing panes. In general, restored wood windows look better, last longer and add more to the resale value of a historic home than vinyl or aluminum replacements.

Roofs on old houses can often be worse energy eaters than windows. “On a lot of old houses, the walls and windows are proportionally overwhelmed by the size, character and performance of the roof,” says Elefante. “In that case, don’t tear the windows out. Address the condition of the roof.”

Even a small roof can have a big impact. An experiment on a couple blocks of Philadelphia row houses a few years ago found that black tar on the flat roofs was absorbing sun and heating up the upper floors. Replacing the tar with a reflective silver coating not only reduced temperatures inside the houses but in the surrounding neighborhood as well.

A SCIENTIFIC APPROACH

Along with their aesthetic value, original materials also contain significant “embodied energy,” an environmental benefit destroyed by modern replacements. “You need to look at the fundamental quality of the materials — whether plaster walls, slate roofs, copper gutters or wood windows — and understand they have lasted a long time and will continue to last if treated reasonably well,” Sedovic says. “If a window has to be replaced in three to 10 years, how does that compare to something that’s been in place for 50 to 100? It’s important to look at the cost long-term.”

Unfortunately, there is not a lot of hard evidence to help owners of historic homes, who are contemplating “improvements” such as replacement windows, make the right decisions. “It’s hard to make a comparative discussion between the benefits of a historic casement vs. replacing it,” Sedovic admits, “because there is almost no data available.”

That may be about to change. Interest in sustainable building has led to experiments in green historic home renovation around the country. In Chicago, for example, the Historic Chicago Bungalow Association (HCBA) gathered a team of preservation and greenbuilding experts and began renovating abandoned 1920s brick homes five years ago, with the idea of sharing the results with local homeowners. Where possible, original exteriors, windows and walls are preserved and paired with various modern and efficient energy systems.

This partial insulation ended up being more cost-effective than the $10,000 geothermal system installed in a bungalow down the street.

Annette Conti, executive director of the HCBA, says she expects better results with a geothermal system the HCBA will install in a larger historic home this year. “The larger the house, the better geothermal works,” she notes. “Every project will be slightly different because every home is different and its energy use is different.”

Conti, whose background is in historic preservation, plans to focus on the issue of windows this year. “It alters an old house so much to lose the interesting old window styles,” she says. “The best compromise we’ve come up with is to save the windows on the front of the house and use [replacement] vinyl ones on the sides. Now we get to test it over the next 20 years and compare the performance of historic to vinyl windows.”

Likewise, the Green Building Program of the Office of Sustainable Development in Portland, Ore., is helping local owners of historic homes renovate responsibly. Since winters are relatively mild in Portland, insulating old houses is less of an issue than in Chicago.

Many preservationists say regional initiatives like these may be the key to preserving old homes in a sustainable way. After all, climates and conservation issues differ dramatically from one region to the next.

“What’s important in New England is very different from what’s important in Tucson, where water conservation is a big issue,” says Jackson.

One point is certain: American homes are getting older and we have to find ways to make them work effectively.

“Many people are intoxicated with the new,” says Elefante. “But step outside and look around. Everything out there has already been built. We can’t just find solutions in the cool stuff built last year. We have to find solutions to the stuff that’s already there. Tearing it all down and starting over — that’s just not a good solution.”





What is a Spanish Colonial Home

11 07 2011

 

A Spanish Colonial home is characteristically one with its environment The casual dwellings boast thick stuccoed walls, red tile roofs and enclosed courtyards that extend one’s living space.

As the style migrated throughout the then-Spanish territories, these homes began to veer away from the Spanish and Mexican originals. Today the term Spanish Colonial Revival is used to describe homes built in the early 20th century that incorporate various elements of Mediterranean architecture. But as with all true styles, these homes are linked by a set of common physical characteristics.

Key Features

  • Built from indigenous components. Spanish Colonial homes might be made of adobe in the Southwest and coquina rock in south east.
  • Thick, stucco-clad walls. Thick walls are ideally situated for a hot environment. “Thick walls absorb the day’s heat and gently radiate it back into the building during the cool evenings,” Stacholy says.
  • Small, open windows. Smaller windows, originally sealed by wrought iron grates rather than glass panes, are sited on the building to best capture breezes while avoiding the direct rays of the sun. Wooden shutters, when present, are traditionally mounted on the inside of the home.
  • One story. The Spanish Colonial is the ancestor of our ranch-style house.
  • Limited ornamentation. Ornamentation on these informal homes was often limited to arches on entranceways, principal windows and interior passageways. More elaborate homes might feature intricate stone or tile work, detailed chimney tops and square towers.
  • Wooden support beams. Wooden roof supports project out over the exterior walls in classic Spanish Colonials.
  • Inner courtyard. Historically, the courtyard let families move the cooking — and its accompanying heat and steam — outside. Today, these patios, porches and courtyards act as informal gathering spots for family, extended family and friends.

Practically Speaking: Hassles and Headaches

In hot, arid climates, stucco-clad adobe walls are remarkably long-lasting. However, when located in colder, wetter climates, adobe bricks can shrink and swell, causing the protective stucco to crack or pull away from the interior wall. These homes might require minor patches or complete resurfacing to prevent serious moisture problems. Cracked stucco can also be indicative of foundation issues.

Many Spanish Colonials were built with flat roofs, which, when not drained properly, can leak. Clay-tile roof shingles are durable lifetime materials that require only periodic maintenance. Check regularly for cracked, missing or out-of-place tiles.

Wooden timbers, both interior and exterior, should be inspected for moisture and insect damage.

Green Upgrades

With any old homes going green can sometimes be tricky. Trying to keep the authenticity of your home while bringing it up to date can cause some headaches. Here are some ideas that can help bring that Spanish Colonial Home up to todays green standards.

- Replace old windows with new high r value windows. This will allow you to enjoy the hot arid climates without sacrificing comfort.

- Replace terra cotta roofing shingles with solar voltaic shingles. These shingles are the same look and shape as terra cotta the only difference is that there is a thin solar layer on the top of the shingle allowing the shingle to produce energy.

- Replace exterior doors. Any door leading to the outside can potentially let in or out heat and cool air. The efficiency part come from the home keeping the treated air in the home and not leaking through cracks.

- Insulation always place a big role in being energy efficient. Adobe naturally insulated pretty well, so my only suggestion would be to make sure all cracks are patched and the roof is sealed.

 





LEED Certification and What it Means

23 06 2011

Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) is a point and credit system developed in 1998 by the U.S. Green Building Council. It is designed to promote energy efficient and environmentally friendly practices in construction and renovation projects. This set of standards is part of an incentive program that offers grant funding and tax breaks for those buildings which qualify for LEED certification. San Diego business owners who want to participate can start the process by contacting any qualified consultants.

LEED Certification Represents Best Practices

Before you get started, you should know that the LEED system is not a minimal building standard. This is a set of incrementally higher benchmarks which are preferred (but not forced upon) a builder or developer. Participation is voluntary. There are four levels of certification:

  • Certified
  • Silver
  • Gold
  • Platinum

Many government buildings have already gone through the certification process – especially in California. The private sector is quickly adapting too. Certification is generally done by an industry professional who is a trained expert in the LEED system. The accreditation process must be overseen by this approved third party – you can’t do it alone.

The Green Building Council issues the LEED certification in a three step process:

  1. Qualified satisfactory application
  2. Thorough review
  3. Compliance verification

Points can be added for “greening” the interior of an office building, not just the exterior structure. Ratings can be influenced by such factors as the type of carpet and paint you use and whether renewable resources are selected for furnishings.

Keep Your Existing LEED Points and Add Even More

Are you already participating in the LEED program? Be aware that any time you make alterations in your work environment this can impact your ability to continue meeting LEED certification requirements. San Diego buildings that are certified are subject to compliance verification and follow-up to ensure that subsequent changes are in line with green objectives.

So, the next time you upgrade or renovate your offices, make sure you take this into account. This is actually a perfect time to increase your certification level – wouldn’t it be great to go for platinum? We would love to help you achieve this goal.