A Cutting-Edge House in The
Heartland
Offcuts
Ecobuild Conference Explores Sustainable
Design
America may be one of the world's leaders in high-tech
innovation, but for the most part the way we build houses is
still stuck in the 19th century. The Partnership for Advanced
Housing Technology (PATH), a joint venture between government
and industry, is trying to change that. In June, the partners
unveiled their latest demonstration project, the PATH Concept
House, in Omaha, Neb.
The PATH Concept House in Omaha, Neb., was designed to
blend into a modest urban neighborhood. Until it's is sold
— to a low- or moderate-income family — the home is
serving as a museum of innovative building products and
techniques.
Built on an infill lot in a modest urban neighborhood, the home
is slated to be sold to a low- or moderate-income family. Until
then, however, it's serving as a museum of cutting-edge
building products and techniques. Visitors receive a set of
headphones and a wand; pointing the wand at a particular
feature activates a recorded explanation. More than 50
innovative components are mentioned on the tape. One highlight
is the Truth Window, a cutaway section revealing all of the
exterior wall's layers. There's also an unfinished room above
the garage where visitors can inspect the roof's
components.
The joys of prefabrication. Innovative features include a
prefabricated ICF foundation; panelized wall and floor systems;
soy-based insulation; wireless switches; and stacked closet
space that converts easily to an elevator shaft. The house is
also equipped with a graywater system that filters and
sterilizes drain water from sinks and showers before sending it
to the clothes washer, toilets, and irrigation system.
According to PATH members, it's the first municipal application
of this particular system anywhere in the country.
Project manager James Lyons of Newport Partners in Davidson,
Md., says that the Concept House proves that "prefabrication
works." The ICF foundation was fully assembled in less than a
day, he says, and each of the floor systems — built in a
factory and shipped to the site in 8-foot-wide panels —
installed in less than an hour. The house will be easy to
remodel, too: Inside, moveable interior partitions can be
reconfigured by an average do-it-yourselfer with standard
tools, and the wireless switches can be reprogrammed to control
any lights in the house.
Among the house's unique elements are interior walls that can
be easily repositioned with basic hand tools (left). The Truth
Window gives visitors an inside look at the exterior wall
construction (right).
No compromises. Overcoming the objections of building officials
can be a major hurdle during innovative residential projects
like this one, but builder Fernando Pagés Ruiz of
Lincoln, Neb., praises Omaha's building officials for their
support. "They listened to our arguments, and in the end they
approved everything we wanted to do, without compromises," he
says.
PATH hopes to break ground on a second Concept Home in the
fall, in Charleston, S.C. It will be designed to withstand such
challenges as high winds, coastal flooding, termites, and
humidity. More information on the Omaha project, including
house plans and a virtual tour, is available at
www.pathnet.org. — Tom O'Brien
Offcuts
• A proposed change to the IRC that would have mandated
fire sprinklers for all new one-and two-family homes was
defeated at the ICC Final Action Hearings, held in May in
Rochester, N.Y. Opponents — including NAHB — argued
that existing residential sprinkler systems were costly and
unreliable. The appendix of the IRC will continue to address
fire-sprinkler requirements, giving local jurisdictions the
opportunity to adopt them if they choose.
• A recent tornado that leveled Greensburg, Kan., has
prompted another locality in that state to add a safe-room
requirement to its building code. At its regular meeting in
May, the Bonner Springs, Kan., city council voted to require
that all new residential structures include either a basement
or an area of storm protection capable of withstanding 250-mph
winds. For houses without basements, safe-room construction
could add as much as $7,000 to the cost of the home.
• According to the National Association of Realtors, the
nation's median existing-home price fell 1.3 percent over the
past year — but some cities have resisted the trend. Home
values continue to rise in Seattle; Portland, Ore.; Boise,
Idaho; Salt Lake City; Austin, Texas; Charlotte, N.C.; and
Raleigh, N.C., among others.
• Even though paint companies continue to appeal a Rhode
Island jury's verdict holding them liable for distributing
lead-based paint in that state (In The News, 2/07), a superior
court judge has ordered them to begin planning the abatement
process. Judge Michael Silverstein said it was unlikely that
Sherwin-Williams, NL Industries, and Millennium Holdings would
get the verdict overturned in the state Supreme Court. The
cleanup is expected to cost the companies billions of
dollars.
• An Atlanta businessman whose claims of being a
successful real estate mogul landed him a starring role on the
A&E series Flip This House is being investigated for fraud.
The 2006 episodes showed Sam Leccima buying and fixing up
several Atlanta-area homes, then making handsome profits when
he resold them. Trouble is, he never actually owned several of
the houses he refurbished. What's more, his license to sell
real estate was revoked in 2005 for ethical shortcomings; the
Better Business Bureau gave his company an unsatisfactory
rating because of complaints against it. When asked to comment
on the allegations, a spokesman for A&E said the network
doesn't check on the people who appear on its shows, preferring
to take them at their word.
Ecobuild Conference
Explores Sustainable Design
In May, several thousand architects, engineers, and
contractors attended Ecobuild America in Anaheim, Calif. The
three-day conference focused on whole-
building design, which strives to produce sustainable buildings
by integrating all aspects of the design process.
At most green-building events, displays of bamboo flooring,
ICFs, photovoltaic modules, and tankless water heaters pack the
show floor. Many such products were on display at Ecobuild
America — but there was also a lot of software aimed at
architects, apparently the largest single group in attendance.
Square One Research, for example, demonstrated its Ecotect
modeling program, which allows architects to create simulations
that predict how a design will perform in heating, cooling,
lighting, ventilation, acoustics, and resource
consumption.
Advanced 3-D design modeling software makes it easier to
build complicated structures. This scale model represents a
project designed by Frank Gehry.
Showstoppers. Gehry Technologies — which demonstrated its
3-D design modeling software — provided one of the more
eye-catching exhibits: a scale model of a building designed by
Frank Gehry. Another attention-grabber was the SG Blocks
display, a shipping container with door and window openings cut
into it. The company uses shipping containers as building
modules; they're strong and easy to transport, and they can be
joined or stacked in various configurations. They're also
readily available: According to the company, there are close to
300,000 extras floating around the U.S. simply because
returning them empty to their countries of origin is too
expensive. So far, the containers have been used only once
— for a single two-module demonstration project in
Charleston, S.C. — but an office building for the
military and a multistory retirement home are in the
works.
Performance-based ratings. The word "performance" cropped up
again and again at the conference. John Carmody, director of
the Center for Sustainable Building Research at the University
of Minnesota, spoke about moving beyond point-based
green-building standards. Under systems like LEED, projects
earn points toward green certification by complying with items
in a list of recommended building practices. The problem with
this approach, said Carmody, is that mixing and matching from
such a list may not produce the desired outcome. As an
alternative, he suggested performance-based rating systems,
which focus instead on obtaining specific outcomes, such as
reduced energy or water consumption, clean indoor air, and
reduction of material waste over a building's life cycle.
SG Blocks' modular building system uses shipping
containers, which can be joined edge-to-edge or stacked
vertically.
Because it's so hard to predict how buildings will perform when
systems and materials are combined, numerous software tools,
databases, and online calculators have been developed to make
it easier to design to performance-based standards. Carmody
pointed to two free online calculators he helped develop: One,
for selecting windows, can be found at
www.efficientwindows.
org, and the other, for designing commercial facades, at
www.commercialwindows.umn.edu. — David Frane