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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Miller says one of his goals is to demonstrate what homebuilders can do to “make our quality of life on this planet better, starting with utilizing solar energy, which involves water conservation and then all of the other green elements. The fact that we are now working on a green-building program as a nation of builders is encouraging to me,” he says. “I believe we’ve had a paradigm shift in the last few years so that builders have passed the point to where they’re saying it costs too much; now everyone is trying to get in on it—even the big guys. When you look at the overall operating costs and money saved over the next 10 to 30 years, there’s a payback.”

Another builder who’s on board with green building is Arn McIntyre of McIntyre Builders in Grand Rapids, MI. McIntyre also is a member of the Census Committee on the National Green Building Standard that has worked to develop the emerging standards. He helped develop water and air quality standards.

Water efficiencies in homebuilding are situational, says McIntyre. “One of the reasons we use the National Association of Home Builders standards is because it is a flexible document,” says McIntyre. “Depending on the situation and what the homeowner wants, there are a lot of commonsense things that are cost-effective and easy to implement.”

His company uses low-volume flush toilets, and water restrictions on showers and faucets. “We use on-demand hot water heaters quite a bit,” he says. “We don’t just use them,  but design them properly into the home to greatly reduce the amount of piping so there’s less water volume.”

McIntyre points out that the more water volume there is in pipes and fittings, the more wasted water there is, because it has a longer run to get hot water to a particular spigot or faucet. He designs it differently, “instead of typically having the hot water heater in the basement or in a crawl space, the hot water heater is right in the master bathroom in a closet, right next to the shower and sink. Then, the next room over is the kids’ main bath and it might be right above the kitchen, so you have very short hot water plumbing runs, so, thus, you get water quicker and there’s less wasted water.”

Next to toilets, clothes-washing machines are the second biggest contributors to water usage in the home. Combined, they account for 50% of the water usage in a home, says McIntyre. “Front-loading washing machines use up to 18,000 gallons less per year for the average family,” says McIntyre. “That equates to less detergent and less hot water heated, so there are other benefits.”

On the outside, McIntyre Builders utilizes such measures as alternate or low-impact stormwater management techniques, such as rain guards, bioswales, and native plantings.  Irrigation systems can be zoned, or water can be distributed through drip irrigation or subsurface irrigation.

“You’re getting water to the point to where you need it most effectively with the least amount of waste,” he says. “That can be combined with a rain sensor system, and maybe soil moisture sensors, so you’re not watering when the soil is moist enough.”

Commonsense water efficiency measures can be cost-effective, McIntyre adds. “Some of the things, like flow restrictors, are very cost-effective. Other things like dual-flush toilets —which were quite a bit more expensive in the past—are getting competitive nowadays, and are becoming more of a value to the consumer. The on-demand hot water heaters are probably the most costly, but you’ll get a payback within three to seven years, depending on the family’s size and how the family uses it,” he says.

McIntyre points out that water efficiency needs differ from one region to another. “In Michigan, I’m sitting about 30 miles away from a fifth of the world’s fresh water supply,” says McIntyre. “Michigan is very protective of the water supply, so there is an awareness of water consumption, even though we are right in the middle of all this fresh water.”

Ask homeowners what their two top requests are in residential green building and they’ll say energy and air quality, McIntyre says. ‘Those are the two that have immediate impact on the pocketbook, or in the health and living environment in the home. The third thing on the list is water. Most people don’t have an awareness of it from a monetary payback,” says McIntyre. “Even with the on-demand hot water heaters, the payback is energy because you are burning less energy. Water is one of those ‘feel-good’ things that if someone can get it with everything else, they’re going to do it.”

Photo: McIntyre Builders Inc.
A water heater saves water, when located properly, to reduce water volume in pipes.

While there is more of an awareness of the need for water conservation in the Midwest now than a few years ago, McIntyre notes it’s “nothing like what it is in the Southwest and Florida—those areas of the country where exterior water consumption, water management, and irrigation are very critical items.”

Matt Belcher, a green builder in St. Louis, MO and owner of Belcher Homes, is finding it easier to comply with green-building guidelines, because the fixtures are getting easier to find on the market, with more manufacturers throwing their hats in the ring. “The green market is the largest market for manufacturers,” he says. “There are new products all of the time, and some of the big companies like Kohler and Moen are coming out with products that perform better, and have low-flow and water-conserving features. Enough of them are doing it that prices are somewhat in check, which is good.”

Belcher agrees the emerging NAHB standards provide flexibility. He frequently meets with other homebuilders throughout the US, and notes how builders in the arid Southwest will modify water requirements to meet drought conditions while in his part of the country, when there’s an ample water supply with the Mississippi and Missouri rivers. “There’s no reason to wait until there’s a problem to address it,” he says. “It’s so much easier to incorporate these features into our homes now anyway; it’s becoming a no-brainer, which is good for me.”

Belcher Homes is constructing a 170-acre development with about 280 units, a mix of townhouses, cottage homes, and detached single-family homes. The community, Rock Hill Trails, is across the Mississippi River from an existing conservation community that has received acclaim, Prairie Crossing. The development Belcher Homes is constructing is part of a larger area of acreage owned by a family that has operated the farm on it since pre-Civil War times.

Photo: McIntyre Builders Inc.
A dual flush toilet that flushes at 1.6 or .9 gallons per flush.

“Louis and Clark probably walked this exact farm here looking for something to eat while they were ready to go on their boat trip up the Missouri,” says Belcher. “This particular tract was adjacent to the City of Wood River and ripe for development. The owners had been approached by developers we bought out, and they knew it was their family legacy that it would be developed at one time, so they put an extensive effort into educating themselves on low impact development. They wanted to develop it using those techniques and also to build all of the homes green. They contacted me and I jumped all over it, because this is a phenomenal project.”

Among the many planned water-saving features, were: no storm sewers, but piping to transfer water from one bio-retention area to another; various curb structures to control water, such as V curbs or ribbon curbs; constructed wetlands, in addition to bioretention areas; roadside infiltration gardens, green gardens, and other measures to control hardscape run-off will be utilized to slow down stormwater and channel it into bioretention areas; the use of native plants to negate the need for mechanical irrigation; the installation of rain barrels to use for irrigation; the construction of an underground cistern-type facility at the community center to use for its irrigation needs; and a moisture meter to ensure wet ground is not being irrigated.

In the homes’ interior, water-conserving measures will include low-flow fixtures, low-flow, and dual-flush toilets and tankless water heaters, if practical. Belcher Homes utilizes front loading washers and energy-efficient dryers. “Front-loading washing machines use less water to get clothes clean, so that allows you to use less drying time,” Belcher points out.

Belcher Homes also is considering PEX piping—a type of tubing threaded throughout the house like a wire. It goes through a manifold and has return lines, so it operates more efficiently. “We’re working a smarter house design to minimize the use of materials, not only in the plumbing, but in everything else,” says Belcher. “Standard features comply with the green-building guidelines, which will be launched as green building standards, so we comply with those minimums and offer others as upgrades.”

Potential homeowners have expressed excitement over the project. “You think it is going to have to be a big educational process, but it seems like a lot of people already have a basic idea and know enough about it that they want to learn more,” says Belcher. “They are somewhat savvy and fascinated to be able to actually see it. We’ve received nothing but positive remarks from people interested in how things are going and when they can get out to see it, which is obviously a good thing.”

While Belcher has always been an advocate of green building, the NAHB’s guidelines—soon to become standards—have given builders like him “a lot more focus,” he notes. “By focusing on different areas like shorter pipe runs, that saves me money and lowers my bottom line,” he says, adding he’s also cut solid waste by two-thirds by recycling items like cardboard.

“Our bottom line has tightened up quite a bit and there’s a lot to be said there,” Belcher says. “There’s a benefit from the environmental standpoint based on population growth. We hit 300 million people in the United States last year and they all need a place to live. It’s good that our industry is looking at how we manage the resources it takes to provide that shelter.”

There will come a time, Belcher believes, when green building will be the standard, with conventional builds being an exception. “The guidelines being made into a national standard is the first huge leap to get there,” he says.

McIntyre points out that green-building associations are growing in membership on an ongoing basis with an increasing number of homes being certified, as more builders are taking training. “You can look at that a couple of ways: There are builders out there who truly are the core of the organization, are environmentally-conscious, and looking at sustainability,” he says. “Then there are builders who see the market need, and see they have to get involved or are going to be left behind. The general feeling of the builders who have been doing this—and even the ones who have just started doing it but are very astute—is that in five to 10 years, green building will be the norm.


Author's Bio: Journalist Carol Brzozowski lives in Coral Springs, FL.

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