March 2008

A Deeper Shade of Green

When the National Association of Home Builders rolls out its modified green building standards, water efficiency and conservation will top the list.

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By Carol Brzozowski

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But some homebuilders are already instituting water efficiencies in their own green- building practices before the standards were even being developed. In the homebuilding industry, Tucson, AZ-based green builder and solar pioneer, John Wesley Miller has been “green” before green was popular, his peers say. “In Tucson, we’ve always been very water conscious because we live in the desert,” says Miller. “I grew up running the hose from the evaporative cooler to a tree or a plant, so we used the water twice. Over the years, I was learning more. When the US Department of Energy started realizing that pumping water was part of energy and by saving water, we saved energy, they made the law to go to the 1.6 gallon toilets instead of four to six gallons.”

And while energy, as well as water savings, became evident, most people still don’t make the connection between the two, Miller says. “I think we need to get that message out more that, if you save water, you save energy—if you save energy, you save water—because it takes a lot of water to generate electricity,” he says. “It’s on our mind much more out here in the desert than it would be in areas where there is a lot of rain and rivers.”

Among Miller’s accomplishments, is the construction of his second, zero-energy home in his new development, Armory Park del Sol. Zero net-energy homes consume the same amount of energy they produce. The 2,168-square-foot, all-electric home features photovoltaic panels that produce electricity from sunlight, high-efficiency appliances, and a rainwater-harvesting system. The home was built with the help of the NAHB Research Center and Tucson Electric Power Co.

Armory Park del Sol has attracted other accolades as well. A 2006 water use study indicates that, when compared to Tucson’s water use of 247 gallons per house per day in homes constructed in 2000 or after, Armory Park del Sol utilizes 119 gallons per house per day. The study shows that over a decades-long lifespan of a home, Armory Park del Sol residents’ water savings will exceed 1.4 million for each home.

Some of the features at Armory Park del Sol that led to the water-efficient numbers, include the elimination of high summer peak water use by concentrating run-off during project start-up, the use of xeriscaping and water harvesting, the development of small individual lots with ‘inviting’ common areas, and ‘conscientious occupant behavior.’

“That’s really significant,” notes Miller. “Part of it is the nature of the people buying our homes. They tend to be more environmentally concerned, and that’s why they look us up and buy here.”

When it comes to water efficiency, Miller says his company first considers the land planning, utilizing stormwater as to minimize or eliminate the need for domestic water. “You do the land grading so you can retain the water on each lot as long as it is safe,” he says. “Then the whole development has good drainage. Because of our erratic rainfall—we’ll have no rain for six months and then the sky will drop out—we have to grade our development so we have retention/detention areas in our master planning.

“We utilize the water on the development as long as we can,” he says. “There’s a major area where it has to fill up to a certain point before it can run into the storm sewer and put a burden on the municipal system. We have low-water to no-water use and drought-tolerant plants in all of the common areas.”

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Homeowners are educated to dig tree wells down so that when it rains, the water soaks in around the plants and sits there as long as it’s safe from such factors as mosquito breeding. On the inside of homes, Miller has been utilizing such approaches as a 1.6-gallon, low-flush toilet, water-conserving showerheads, and tub fillers.

While the 2006 water study concentrates on household water use per day, the common area water usage is much less than any other part of town as well. “When you look at the way we graded the lots, the patios, and educated the people on the plants we used, combined with the low-water use fixtures and the smaller hot water line so people don’t have to wait as long for the hot water line to evacuate the cold water before they get the hot water, all of those things combined together get an average that’s less than half of the city,” he says. Next Page >

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