Subscribe to feed

Archive for the ‘Alternatives’ Category

By Brandon J Green

Anyone who reads my blog knows how interested I am in exploring the use of shipping containers when it comes to building a sustainable home.  I have been very passionate about exploring different concepts and talking with individuals who support the use of recycled shipping containers.  In Europe and a number of other countries, the concept has started to expand not only in residential settings but also for commercial use, schools and even hotels.

Low cost, sustainable home in Phoenix, Arizona

Low cost, sustainable home in Phoenix, Arizona

A couple of months ago, I sat down with partner and co-founder of Upcycle Living, Ashton Wolfsinkle.  The old saying “build it and they will come” is exactly what Ashton has done here in Phoenix, Arizona.  He and his partner have started building residential homes out of shipping containers.  Right now, on a rented lot at 5th St and Roosevelt, you can view a model they have built.  It is roughly 1280 sf and has two floors with two bedrooms and two and half baths.  They have used 4 full length (40′) containers and have a complete model ready to preview.  It has bamboo floors, modern cabinets, high efficiency toilets, and sky lights.

Shipping containers are very strong and can be configured in a wide variety of ways to create very unique and modern living spaces.  They are very durable and cannot be harmed by insects or weather.  Once a plan is designed, a home can be created offsite and then shipped into a location with minimal assembly required.  On site, the containers are put in the desired configuration and plumbing/electric are completed.  Even these two essential components can be done off site and then snapped together on location limiting expensive contractor fees and speeding up the time it takes to finish a home.

A buyer can design their own home and while it is being built offsite.  They can have their land prepared for delivery.  A container home can be set on a cement slab or it can be put on cement pilons thus

Nice large master bedroom

Nice large master bedroom

 reducing the cost.  Once the home is set in place, it is affixed and becomes a permanent structure known to withstand hurricanes and tornadoes.  Usually a crawl space is left so plumbing can easily be accessed underneath the home. 

 Most successful designs minimize the number of walls where plumbing is placed but what you end up with are containers set side by side or stacked on top of each other with all electric and plumbing in the floor or walls.  Completely invisible to the owner inside and totally protected to the elements on the outside.  

One of the biggest arguments I see and hear from potential buyers is the idea that they do not like the look and feel of a

Stucco or siding can be added to change the exterior appearance

Stucco or siding can be added to change the exterior appearance

 container.  I had my own theory on how to solve this problem but I discussed this with Ashton and he confirmed, “Upcycle Living can put many different types of skins on the containers.”                       

They can add stucco or many different types of siding so the house looks more traditional from the outside.  They can add an A-frame roof or you can have a more traditional flat roof.  Since the containers are so strong, you can add a solar system to the roof or your very own sustainable roof garden.  Your only limitation is your own imagination.

I will post more updates about this home and other designs from

A nice open kitchen makes this a great home for entertaining

A nice open kitchen makes this a great home for entertaining

 Upcycle Living.  If you would like to schedule an appointment to see the home or discuss possible options about buying it, please feel free to drop Ashton Wolfsinkle a call or email me, Brandon Green, directly at bgreenrealtor@gmail.com

The model can be purchased and Upcycle Living is able to deliver it to almost any location a buyer may desire. 

Nice, bright open living room and kitchen with stairs to the upstairs bedrooms

Nice, bright open living room and kitchen with stairs to the upstairs bedrooms

Remeber if you have a vacant lot, want to tear down an existing home, or need assistance finding a vacant lot,  the model or a more personalized version can be purchased and delivered to your property.  Call me at 602-722-8125 or email me at bgreenrealtor@gmail.com to discuss pricing and for more information.

Take care of the earth-
For all it’s worth!
Don’t take this planet for granted.
In all of space, it’s the only place
that’s fit for the human race.

mobile project

Stackable, portable concept homes offer mobile living — with a view
By Emanuele Comi for CNN

Tired of living in the same location but don’t want to leave the house you love? That wouldn’t be a problem if architect Felipe Campolina had his way.

The Brazilian architect has designed a concept for a residential tower comprised of portable, stackable apartment units, which he says opens up new possibilities for ways of living in the city.

His design would allow owners to take their home with them when they travel — whether for a weekend away or for longer periods, he said.

The mobile home tower project is at the concept stage — and it could be years before it is built, if ever at all.

But if it is realized, it would offer an innovative and eco-friendly solution to living in urban areas, Campolina said.

“We have enough technology to build with fewer materials and minimize the impact on nature, but we continue to build with a lot of waste,” he told CNN.

His vision would call for units with a green roof and walls and a system for recycling water.

The tower, whose first unit would be built nine meters above ground, would also offer relief from overcrowding in densely populated areas.

“The geometry of the tower has a small projection area on the ground, designed to facilitate its application in dense urban centers, where space is very limited,” he said.

Still just a concept, Campolina — who designed the building for architecture journal eVolo’s Skyscraper Competition — said with enough public interest, it just might become a reality one day.

Click the link below to see the photo gallery and to explore his vision for the future of city housing.

http://www.cnn.com/2010/TECH/04/10/portable.housing.concept/

Ever hear of plastic island in the Pacific Ocean?

Here is a very good video showing Dan Nocera at MIT as he talks about Sun Catalytix, the next generation of solar energy, and ARPA-E funding through the Recovery Act.

Posted: 09/09/2009 01:30:37 AM PDT
From the Santa Cruz Sentinel

As much as she likes helping dogs and cats, part-time veterinarian Donna Horne has a bigger vision for helping the planet: curbing our carbon footprint by introducing compatibility-based ridesharing via an Internet site that provides background checks on potential riders and drivers.

“It’s pretty creepy out there in the world of carpooling,” said Horne, who, with engineer Michael Baird, launched ZoomPool last month. The online carpool site is one of several formed in response to higher gas prices, tighter budgets and a growing interest in environmental stewardship.

Like many other sites, ZoomPool allows people to find others who are going to the same place at the same time. It may, however, be the first site that provides a way for drivers and riders to gauge their compatibility and safety before jumping in the car together.

Horne says she wouldn’t get in a stranger’s car without some information about the driver and wouldn’t want to drive around with complete strangers. ZoomPool “is totally about making it more safe and compatible, not just for environmental reasons but as a way to be supportive of the community.”

There are dozens of government-run programs such as 511.org and 429-POOL and private sites such as Zimride.com, erideshare.com or craigslist.org that connect riders with drivers, but they don’t check for key compatibility issues such as chatty personalities or quiet ones, preferences for radio news, country-western or silence, allergies, smoking and gender. 

“This gives you a chance to make new friends in a very low stress way,” Horne said. “By carpooling, you can see if you ever want to go out with them again.”

Rather than focus on long-term daily commuting relationships, ZoomPool also facilitates one-time rides to the kind of people who don’t want to drive alone up to San Francisco for an art exhibit, or to San Jose for a conference or wedding.

Members may opt into the service for free or they can pay $15 per year to be a Certified Member, which means they are screened annually for drunken driving violations and other personal security issues not speeding tickets. The company collects driver’s licenses and car insurance information.

“Using ZoomPool to facilitate carpooling was a no-brainer,” said Virginia Lee, who last month organized the Wellness Fair at Cabrillo College, an annual fundraiser for the College of Botanical Healing Arts. “As the price of gas continues to creep back up and people are forced to be more resourceful with limited financial resources, I would say that ZoomPool is an idea whose time has come.”

ZoomPool riders are charged 20 cents per mile. No cash is exchanged because ZoomPool members pay online with a credit card. The company, which pays fees, takes 14 percent for processing. A rider’s payment is preauthorized but not actually completed until 30 minutes after a trip begins so riders can cancel a transaction if plans fall through. Drivers receive 17.2 cents per mile from each rider up to three riders. They can either store their earnings at ZoomPool to use later or receive twice-monthly checks. The minimum cost for rides is $1. The maximum limit of 20 cents per mile is to prevent profiteering from drivers. After a shared trip, riders are asked to respond to a short feedback survey much like eBay allows buyers to grade sellers.

Since the company was incorporated just over a year ago, Baines and Horne have invested their own cash and relied on family funding totaling about $100,000 and employees who will work for low wages and equity. Currently Horne is trying to sell the idea to venture capitalists in search of $1.9 million in funding to grow the company nationally.

Horne is not a stranger to small business. More than 20 years ago, she launched a veterinarian hospital in her New Hampshire home and grew it into a 20-person company before selling it two years ago to move to Bonny Doon and marry fellow veterinarian David Horne, who works at Companion Animal Hospital in Santa Cruz.

While the competition of other online rideshare sites could be daunting, Horne says the biggest obstacle is just getting people out of their cars.

“Inertia is actually our largest competitor,” Horne said.

ZoomPool is working with the Cultural Council of Santa Cruz County for Open Studios and with organizers of Green Business Camp Santa Cruz 2009 next month.

“We want to promote all aspects of green business,” said Aaron Greene who is helping to organize the Green Business Camp. “ZoomPool does a great job of reducing your carbon foot print.”

For more information, visit zoompool.com.

Click photo to enlarge
Former veterninarian Donna Horne has started Zoompool which puts together… (Dan Coyro/Sentinel)

By By James Kanter
Published: September 9, 2009

Until four years ago, the United States Mission in Geneva was another unassuming concrete office block in the city’s diplomatic district.

Now staff members can boast the building is a showcase for green technologies.

The transformation began when the exterior of the building began to crumble earlier this decade. Instead of carrying out a straightforward restoration, however, diplomats asked the State Department to install a solar electric system.

Douglas M. Griffiths, the deputy permanent representative at the mission and an economic officer there when the idea for the solar system arose, said the panels protected the facade from sun and water and reduced the need for cooling by shading the windows.

But Mr. Griffiths said the project also had political benefits at a time when the United States was seen by many governments as turning up its nose at global efforts to cut greenhouse gas emissions.

Festooning the building with photovoltaic panels helped counter “a false perception that we were not in the game,” Mr. Griffiths told me last week during a tour of the building.

The mission’s latest project was replacing aging air-conditioning with a system using electromagnetic fields rather than a traditional motor to power an air compressor.

The chiller – the first device of its size to go into operation in Europe – has reduced the mission’s overall water use and its production of chemical waste. In addition, the device’s key components operate in a frictionless and oil-free environment, enhancing energy efficiency and vastly reducing maintenance.

 

Mr. Griffiths said the 225-ton chiller, manufactured by Multistack, a company in Wisconsin, cost the State Department around $2.7 million and should reduce energy consumption for air-conditioning by 30 percent.

The chiller was switched on in April this year and is expected to pay for itself by 2019. A larger device was installed at the United States Embassy in Tokyo in 2007.

Installation of the solar panels cost the State Department $1.6 million and the system is expected to pay for itself by 2015. The American firms Solar Design Associates, and Hankins & Anderson were responsible for the design. Companies including Schott Solar produced the photovoltaic panels.

The system went online in July 2005 and at peak power can generate enough electricity to power 37 homes. The mission feeds the power directly into the local grid but benefits by buying it back at a preferential rate — cutting about $70,000 from the mission’s power bills each year.

Green Diplomacy

I was given another link by a Andrew Shane on our post which stated an additional website to stop the delivery of unsolicited yellow pages.  Please take a look at http://www.yellowpagesoptout.com/ .  The site will provide additional information on opting out.  Thanks Andrew.

Video to see 10 more green tips some of which I have discussed previously but its a good video with helpful hints.  I especially like the fact that you can change your plastic shower curtain with hemp.  Again, I cannot stress the importance of every home owner changing just one light bulb to a CFL.  The energy and cost savings would be incredible.