Showing posts with label Green Home Architecture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Green Home Architecture. Show all posts

Haute Écologie: A tony residence near Athens combines glitz and green

designed by U.S. based pldp architects
June 2009
By David Sokol

The creators of the Kavouri Residence are Sergio Palleroni and Margarette Leite, the husband-and-wife partners of the Austin, Texas- and Portland, Oregon-based pldp architects. Architects as well as educators now teaching at Portland State University, Palleroni and Leite are perhaps best known for socially responsible work done under the banner of pldp and of BaSiC Initiative, a design-build community outreach program affiliated with multiple schools.
The homeowners of the dramatic Kavouri Residence site, a pair of photographers, first learned of Palleroni and Leite through this body of work. Attending a wedding in Mexico, the married couple stayed in a pldp-designed house adjacent to a BaSiC Initiative-designed library and weaving workshop, and quickly decided to hire pldp for their own project. Intended to replace the dilapidated home of the wife’s grandfather, the Kavouri Residence—or, more specifically, its budget—bears little resemblance to pldp’s do-good works. Yet architect and client used the extravagant resources for achieving high standards of sustainability and execution, rather than ostentatious or energy-gulping display. “The building ends up being very simple, but there’s a lot of thought about how it fit into the site, the views it had, and the extraordinary selection of materials,” Palleroni says.


Like Greek temples and vernacular coastal homes, the Kavouri Residence looks out toward the port and the Acropolis. Fully completed last year, it stands exactly on the footprint of the old homestead, and reuses a sizable portion of that structure. “We took all the materials after the excavation, sorted it out for earth and clay content (there’s probably 3 percent cement in there), and made rammed-earth floors,” Palleroni points out.

The material was laid carefully on top of radiant heating and cooling pipes, and the results have the appearance of old leather. They are finished simply in linseed oil, because, Palleroni also notes, "finishes are where a lot of the contaminants are."

In another example of reuse, an old stone wall is incorporated into the photography studio adjacent to the house. Bordering those elegant floors, the house rises on a concrete frame filled in with Porotherm, a honeycomb brick produced in Austria. The brick’s cellular construction earns it an R35 rating, but still allowed local masons to erect the house according to tradition.


“We put a rigid layer of insulation over the structural columns, so they were equally insulated,” Palleroni adds. “ Basically, if you shut all the windows and doors, the interior and exterior could be totally isolated from each other.” The tight envelope places that much less stress on the hot- and cold-water heating and cooling systems, which are fed almost entirely by a rooftop solar hot water system and from two submerged rainwater cisterns located near the kitchen, respectively.

Of course, the Kavouri Residence isn’t intended for self-containment. Configured around an internal courtyard and punctuated with clerestory windows all around, it begs to be unfurled into the landscape. And just as the photographers’ kids easily skip from deep, low window sills into the courtyard, or down the terraced landscape that surrounds house and studio, so breezes from the harbor of Athens dart and tumble through the building.

Source: http://greensource.construction.com/



Pleasant Hill Home, Freeport, Maine

Project size: 2,250 sq. ft.
Project cost: $625,000


Approach & Result:


  • Located in reclaimed sand pit - limits the impact to zone and excavation.


  • Maintained existing vegetation and trees, landscaped with native grasses and plants - minimized water use


  • Install stormwater management system - control erosion and protect surrounding forests and fields


  • Good directional orientation - maximized solar gain and help power the 3kw photovoltaic roof


  • Overhang Roof - let the sun in during winter but keep it out during summer.


  • Use low-E, argon-filled windows throughout, windows on south side allow sunlight to enter during winter.


  • Compact flourescent bulbs and high efficiency appliances - energy-saving


  • Propane boiler - delivers water on demand


  • Advanced framing techniques and high insulation - made the home cool in summer and warm in winter.


  • Strategic location of windows - maximize the use of natural light


  • Construction waste and products were sorted for recycling and reuse


  • Building materials used have high recycled content and/or locally produced - reducing shipping cost and fuel use

Carsten Crossing Oakgrove Model in Rocklin California
by Grupe Company Source: www.greenhomeguide.org
Project Size: 2,543 sq. ft. (4-bedroom)
Site Cost: $128,000 per lot
Construction Cost: $70 per sq. ft.
Leed Certification: Certified
Approach and Result:

Roof: Photovoltaic roof tiles - solar power source reduce electricity bill by 70%

Insulation: low emissivity window, heat-resistant attic insulation, exterior foam building wraps and tight ducts - prevent heat from leaking out during the winter and in during summer

Equipment: Variable speed furnaces with 94% AFUE(Annual Fuel Utilization Efficiency) - 94 % fuel is converted to heat and only 6% is lost.

Materials and Resources: Diverted 75% of concrete, roofing, drywall and wood waste from landfill, framing lumber and concrete came from local resources - minimized pollution and fuel use to ship materials to building site.

Indoor Enviromental Quality: Use of dedicated mechanical ventilation system for fresh air.

Site Location and Linkages: Proximity to open space, walk paths and park - reduced fuel cost that come when you can walk to your recreation.









Photo courtesy Pill-Maharam Architects


As an architect I can easily describe a Green Home in an architectural definition, that is a home building that uses scientific and innovative design to be energy efficient and sustainable. LEED(Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) for Homes defines it as residential building that is healthy, comfortable, durable, energy efficient and environmentally responsible.

As a mom, I can put it simply as a well-designed home where one can live comfortably which uses less electricity and water that can save money and the environment. It is quite promising but many are still skeptical and hesitant to green their home or have a green home because of it's higher initial cost than a normal house. According to LEED it is 3 to 5 percent higher to a standard home but the savings on electric and water bill evens out this cost. In the long run, it has a lower cost because of the money saved from the bills not just two or three years but as long as the green home stands, plus it's good to people living in and the environment surrounding it.
You can have a green home built, remodel an existing home green or start greening your apartment or rented space. It is a process but it needs you to get involved in the process. You don't have to spend much but it will depend on your practical decision. It's just a matter of choice. If you are planning to build your dream house or remodel your kitchen, why not build it green. You still have to spend money, so spend it wisely.


The Green House: New Directions in Sustainable Architecture
From the arid deserts of Tucson, Arizona to the icy forests of Poori, Finland to the tropical beaches of New South Wales, Australia to the urban jungle of downtown Manhattan, critics Alanna Stang and Christopher Hawthorne have traveled to the farthest reaches of the globe to find all that is new in the design of sustainable, or "green," homes...(more)




Green Homes: New Ideas for Sustainable Living

GREEN HOMES presents the latest innovations in sustainable architecture in design. After an introductory interview with an international specialist in green building, the book features 35 projects, including houses, apartments, offices, sports facilities, and factories. It explores various aspects of green design, from its ecological and economical benefits, to factors considered when choosing materials: how much energy went into manufacturing the product, whether it is long lasting, and whether it can be recycled or safely disposed of as it breaks down over time....(more)




The New Ecological Home: A Complete Guide to Green Building Options
As homeowners become more environmentally savvy and demand ecological choices, a new generation of architects and builders is emerging, intent on creating warm and inviting homes that cause only a fraction of the environmental impact of conventional building methods. Dan Chiras’ The New Ecological Home provides an overview of green building techniques, materials, products and technologies that are either currently available or promise to be in the near future...(more)




Good Green Homes
Green. It conjures images of a meadow in spring for some, and the color of money for others. What does "green" have to do with our homes? In essence, green building-or sustainable building-means being smart about how we use energy, water, and building materials so that we can live well without needlessly damaging the environment. Creating a good green home isn't just about conservation, about using less or saving more-although that's certainly part of it...(more)


More Green Home Architecture Reference>>



Green Homes Innovation & Design


What is a Green Home?
As an architect I can easily describe a Green Home in an architectural definition, that is a home building that uses scientific and innovative design to be energy efficient and sustainable. LEED(Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) for Homes defines it as residential building that is healthy, comfortable, durable, energy efficient and environmentally responsible.


Athens,Greece
Haute Écologie: A tony residence near Athens combines glitz and green
designed by U.S. based pldp architectsJune 2009

By David Sokol



Pleasant Hill, Maine,U.S.A.
Has received LEED for Homes Silver Certification.
The Green home is located in a reclaimed sand pit which has limit the impact to zone and excavation. It has maintained the surrounding vegetation and trees and is landscaped with native plants which minimized water use...


Project size: 2,250 sq. ft.
Project cost: $625,000


California,U.S.A.
Carsten Crossing Oakgrove Model in Rocklin California
by Grupe Company
Project Size: 2,543 sq. ft. (4-bedroom)Site Cost: $128,000 per lot
Construction Cost: $70 per sq. ft.
Leed Certification: Certified



Frank Lloyd Wright's Falling Water
"No house should ever be on a hill, or on anything. It should be of the hill. Hill and house should live together, each the happier for the other."- Frank Lloyd Wright (Source: Architects and Architecture Quotes)







Recommended Reading...

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Inside My Green Home Architect