Inside the green designer home

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reporter's notebook

Living Homes has also tried to incorporate as many eco-friendly products and design techniques into the construction as possible to further cut down on environmental impact. All of the wood comes from managed forests. In Glenn's home, there is also no floor in the traditional sense: the floor is actually the cement foundation slab. This cuts down on additional materials. (Glenn, however, said the company will likely include more traditional floors in commercial models). Like a lot of cement these days, it includes fly ash harvested from smoke stack scrubbers.

Building the home from factory-built modules, meanwhile, also reduces waste, and cuts construction time and transportation.

But forget the eco-friendly part. What will likely attract buyers is the origami-like feel of the home. Pull open a blond wood wall panel/door next to the kitchen and there's the bathroom. I expected a broom closet. That's the next stylish wall panel/door down. The home is made up of 11 separate modules, but there are about 4 to 5 different module shapes. Thus, the home avoids a boxy, predictable structure.

Upstairs, Glenn shows me one of his own inventions: movable, floor-to-ceiling closets. It takes two or more people to move one, but in a few minutes you can completely reconfigure your household storage.

Then there's the bathroom, complete with sinks made from recycled glass, and silent de-humidifiers. Fabrics hang on the ceiling to give it a tent-like ambience. The light, the glass, the inside tents: academics call this postwar modern, but those who grew up in California know it as Nut Tree Dining Room.

And on the roof there is a rooftop garden populated with native plants. The home's solar panels serve as shade for a patio.

Living Homes has also tried to keep costs down. Cinder blocks compose the walls of the first floor. This isn't to cut down on harmful drywall chemicals. Instead, cinder blocks are cheap, he said.

Overall, the homes cost about $300 a square foot, including building costs. That's more than a standard home, but less than the $450 and $500 a square foot one would pay in a home based around an architect's design.

But the home doesn't seem to be the most kid-friendly place in the world. Glenn has all sorts of Lego structures in his living room and a collection of tastefully arranged toys. But how stylish would the living room look if those toys belonged to someone under 30 years old? First-graders could take some of the modernist sheen off this place in a few days.

Then there are the wall dividers. Each bedroom can be closed off by a telescopic wall. Nonetheless, it's a moving wall. If you lived there as a family, you would have to get accustomed to a higher level of feeling another person's presence. You could imagine it would be like living in adjoining rooms at a hotel: separate but together.

One of the company's primary goals is to make its homes more family-friendly. "We need to make them flexible to deal with people's lifestyle needs," he said. Still, putting those principles into effect may take practice.

Living Homes also doesn't plan on just selling you a home and saying goodbye. Each home comes with a battery of sensors that monitor your power and water consumption. By logging onto a Web site, you can check how you've reduced your carbon footprint. You don't have to log onto the site, but the sensors go in your house regardless.

What if you don't want the sensors, I asked him. What if you're worried about people studying your daily habits via your utility consumption?

Glenn fixed me with a stare as if I'd asked him if I could move in a La-Z-Boy recliner.

"We haven't had that come up," Glenn said. But he said the company could consider it.

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Add a Comment (Log in or register) 2 comments (Page 1 of 1)
Let's Build HouseLet's Start Building Houses with Bamboo Floors Instead of
by Martha Z January 27, 2008 11:43 AM PST
When I had my house built, I decided to use bamboo floors instead of hard wood floors. I personally think that they are more beautiful and they come in many shades. In case you are not familiar w/bamboo flooring, it is the green thing to do. Bamboo is like a weed that keeps on growing and can be harvested every 3 or 5 years (not sure of time frame here). The good thing is that when it is cut, it just grows back again from the same plant. It is not like a tree that dyes after being cut and you have to cut another tree down. Bamboo floors are harder than red wood floors. They are easy to clean and last just as long as hard wood floors.
Instead of cutting down our trees, why not just plant some bamboo in our country. I say lets plant some here because now most bamboo flooring comes from China.

http://WomenOnGuard.com
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