Friday, December 31, 2010

Tuesday, December 28, 2010

So, this IS a "green" house, right?

Beautiful stuff going on at the house today.  We stuttered a little yesterday because of the storm.  But today Teri and the kids painted Rebecca's room.  It's an absolutely gorgeous light purple.  Rebecca worked the whole day with spurts of effort from the boys.
Meanwhile, Poppy and I put together the first garage door and finished everything except the spring system.  We will finish that one and work on the second one tomorrow.

Tim and Chad (electrician and carpenter, respectively) were also here- Tim started putting in all the wall sockets and switches in.  He hung the pendant lights that we bought yesterday and started working on the ceiling fans. Chad almost finished priming/painting. One more bucket will do it.  He will finish tomorrow. 

Jason and Matt J. came and brought under-lay for the tile.  They are coming tomorrow to put the plywood in.  Tile will come in next Tuesday.

Now to the main part and the reason for the title of this post. 

First off, I have noticed that much of my last few months of posting have been pictures or what progress had been made, and not writing about our philosophy.  I suspect this to be expected due to the fact that we are GCing our own house, and have to take care of the small details.  But now that we have an enclosed shell, with the heat on I would like to reflect upon our original ideas, and how close we are coming to them. 

To be perfectly honest with you all I had been worried that all of this "stuff" would work.  By stuff I mean the passive solar aspects of the house.  It all seems like smoke and mirrors, having the sun heat our house.  It sounds good, but really? Although I was confident that the insulation and tight building specs would be helpful in keeping energy costs down, Teri and I really set out to build as close to a zero carbon footprint as possible. 

Today our concept really hit home for me.  I spent the entire day in/around the house today.  When Jim and I got to the site, it was about 10am and very cold (about 30 degrees).  I had set the house temperature at 58 degrees, but when I got into the house it was 62!  Our passive solar design truly worked!  Tim the electrician, was amazed- he called me in from the garage at one point in the afternoon and asked me to explain what was going on.  I explained about the special windows that I had put in, and that we had situated the house towards true north/south.  He was standing in the light and couldn't believe how warm it was.  During the course of the day our geothermal heat only came on twice, for about 5 minutes each time. This while four kids (not to mention seven adults) were coming in and out of the house constantly, leaving doors open to load and unload equipment.  I was thrilled.  I suspect that when we install our wood stove, our heat might not go on at all.

Today was a real morale booster.

Thanks for reading.

Thursday, December 23, 2010

state of the dominion

I know that my posts have been few and far between, but commuting and work and all, it has been very hard to drag myself to do the updates.  Things are going well- 
  • The siding is finished
  • gutters are in
  • Drywall is in, taped and mudded
  • primer is going on as we speak and the ceiling painted at the same time.
Next week is vacation and I have an aggressive schedule
  • I am going to hang the garage doors
  • paint the kids rooms- maybe other rooms if time (living room comes to mind.)
  • Jason is coming to tile
This house is tight!  very little heat is needed to keep us warm.  The energy efficiency  aspect of the house seems to be working perfectly.


 We are all wearing jackets here because the heat hasn't come on yet...  this is a picture of our great room- kitchen, dining room and living room (which also is around the corner)  See how much light is coming in?  Passive solar heating at it's best.  Even before the geothermal unit was turned on, it was several degrees warmer inside than out.

 two pictures of our fully sided house.  The landscaping is going to have to be done next spring.  Ahh well.  This project has taken longer than we expected.
 Looking up through our two story cathedral ceiling in the dining room.  So much light!
Yes, even our gutters are "green".  They end about 3.5 feet up so that we can attach rain barrels to them and we can recycle the rainwater for our gardens and lawn.

Estimated time of move?  Mid January.  WOOT!

Again thanks for reading.

Monday, December 6, 2010