September-October 2007

Indoor-Outdoor Savings

Incorporating water efficiency technologies becomes standard practice for master-planned communities throughout the country.

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By Carol Brzozowski

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Crescent Communities also installed rain barrels connected to gutters behind the sales center. A spigot is located on the outside of the barrel from which water can be drawn and used to irrigate planting beds. “If you want to fill up a watering can, you can do that at the rain barrel, but instead of turning on water you’re paying for, you’re using the rainwater,” Martin says.

Crescent Communities also built an amenities center at the Sanctuary. The 8,000-square-foot building is divided into 4,000 heated square feet and another 4,000 unheated square feet with porches and covered areas and three pools. “We have the first LEED-certified building in Charlotte,” says Martin. “We’ve gotten a good bit of knowledge out of that.”

Photo: Focus Property Group
Water use calculations factor total annual use, rates of application, local plant water requirements, lot size, landscape design, and type of indication system used.

Crescent Communities pursued 30% water reduction through such efforts as lower-flow faucets and reducers. As for landscaping, “All of the plants we use are mostly indigenous to this area; they’re used to the rainwater we normally get from the sky and not what we throw on it,” says Martin. “That should reduce the amount of water needed for irrigation for species that are not indigenous to this area.”

There are few irrigated areas at the Sanctuary, Martin says. “We had a lot of grassy areas we had to clear from the road and put in seeds and straw to get germination to where it looks nice, but yet all of that can’t be irrigated,” he says. “If we did, it would be such a drain on the water, which is all from Charlotte-Mecklenburg Utilities. That would be too expensive to do.”

Martin says it’s been a challenge convincing homeowners a water-efficient landscape can also be attractive. “The only restriction we have with all of our property owners is that within the first 50 feet around their home, they can plant what they want, but outside of that, they have to go with native planting,” Martin says. “It vastly limits how much irrigation you have to put on that lawn; plus, it adds to the overall look of that piece of property. There is some beautiful tree cover out here and when you limit your clearance and put your home in the middle of it, there’s that filtered view from the road and you’re surrounded by trees.”

The amenities center stands as an example of indigenous planting, but Martin says, “For me to say every single thing is native, that’s really hard to find. We did a combination of native and things that didn’t require a lot of water.”

For instance, Crescent Communities chose zoysia for the sod. “If you do fescue, it requires a good bit of water to maintain,” says Martin. “Zoysia turns brown in the winter and goes dormant, yet people accept that. It still looks nice and you don’t have to use near as much water.”

Rain gauges at certain irrigation points are another water-efficient measure being used by some of the builders at the Sanctuary. The Sanctuary is not one of those developments people will pass by and remark on the well-manicured landscaping, but Martin notes, “There are country clubs for that sort of thing. There is a time of the year with the rain and cooler weather where the grass is wonderful,” he says. “Come July and August, there’s going to be some brown.

Photo: Focus Property Group
Homeowners have an array of water efficient fixtures to choose from.

“The seeded areas will grow every year and spread and develop a deeper root system from the rain that falls from the sky, not from what we throw on it.”

Like most land developers, Crescent Communities has found itself in the position of educating homebuyers on the benefits of such “green” practices as water efficiency. While the Charlotte area does not have the same types of water concerns as would be found in the arid Southwest, for example, developing water-efficient homes is a recognition that “there’s a segment of the population that is interested in this and wants this in their development and their community,” says Martin.

“A lot of people who have bought here and our builders are willing to try some things,” says Martin. “They want to see the benefit of it and at the end of the day, they want it to look good. They want it to make sense.”

The biggest learning curve is “that you don’t have to live in an adobe hut and have wild things growing all over your house to be ‘green,’” says Martin. “There are little things you can do,” he says. “If everybody does these little things, look at the difference you can make.”

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In some cases, it costs more to build green at the onset, although savings are realized down the road. But Martin says that’s not a concern with those who are buying houses at a certain price point.

“An extra thousand here or there for an initiative they believe in won’t impact that as much as if you were trying to incorporate that into a $150,000 house,” he says. “Just the economics of it makes it an easier pill to swallow. But at the end of the day, it’s either important to the buyer and they want to incorporate it or it’s not. I don’t know how you overcome that when it’s not. You have to constantly plug it. Next Page >

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