It would be nice if the NAHB guidlines were not so long and intimidating. They seem to dissuade most builders because of this and the measures are expensive. Perhaps first we could start with energy and then we could do some designed "green" amenities. I can do the high performance home thing, but in my town even the best builders would have one hellof a hard time reaching silver rating. If we are doing this to change these best practices to business as usuall then we had better provide for, or better yet require, some continuing education (like they do for Engineers and Architects) for our home builders. Maybe the NAHB can figure out a way to get some funding for Energy Code training and Building Science so it can educate builders abour real "Green Design".
Brad
Mid Missouri Home Energy Services
Professionally Cert.
Home Performance Contractor
Blog Post
Reductio ad absurdum
Published March 23, 2009 Permalink Citation
(2009, March 23). Reductio ad absurdum. Retrieved from https://www.buildinggreen.com/blog/reductio-ad-absurdum
Comments
It would be nice if the NAHB
Michael, so you go ahead and
Michael, so you go ahead and do this lot and have high scores on the board and then what? Will the 'increased' value be reflected when you come to sell it? Will you get your money back? I am hearing (anecdotal) that bronze level houses with similar scores to yours were subsequently tested post construction and failed miserably. The wood burner for example is just nuts when the renewable resources are local, its off grid and with the right kind of kit you could achieve 70% plus efficiency. And then, what if this house was rented would the occupants energy manage the house to its designed specification? The public transport and recycling features equally need putting in context too, how truly energy efficient are they in practice, are they the 's' word?
Josh, I do. Try this link: ht
Josh, I do. Try this link: http://www.icfi.com/Markets/Community_Development/doc_files/apj1098.pdf
I am a NAHB Green Building Verifier.
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Gary, Do you have a link to t
Gary,
Do you have a link to that white paper that you mentioned?
Why would you want to install
Why would you want to install 2 more dishwashers when you already have one? I'm confused at your lodgic? Was that suppose to insinuate that the Standard asks you to install 3 dishwashers in the kitchen?
The NAHB Green Building Standard is written to be affordable, practical and the approach is manageable.
The American Appraisal Institute has a white paper out that mentions that for every $1.00 dollar you trim your heating bills through pro-active green designs and construction the home's value increases $20.00. Yes...your home is worth more green.
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