| "The
Green House"
This Home looks like A Giant Styrofoam Cooler -
But it's really much Cooler than that.
by Nicole Achs Freeling - Half Moon Bay Review Magazine
Last
October, quizzical passersby stopped several times a day at
the building site at 416 Guerrero St. to ask and ogle. What,
they wanted to know, was the story with the structure that
looked like a giant Styrofoam cooler? The house being built
was part of builder Bruce Turner's new green thumb.
Within the last year, clients requesting sustainable building
practices have encouraged Turner to turn over a new leaf.
He attended the National Green Builders Conference last year
and has recently adopted new environmental building practices
at his company, which include recycling used building materials,
employing passive solar design and minimizing erosion at job
sites.
He's also begun employing some unusual materials.
"My
clients are demanding this," Turner said. "You
get so standardized, it can be hard to break habits and
do things differently. this is a new way of thinking."
-Bruce
Turner |
On
Guerrero Street, he's building a house with walls made out
of foam blocks. On Nevada Street in Moss Beach, he's doing
a major remodeling that includes counters made from crushed
bottles, insulation created from old newspapers, and floors
of bamboo and recycled rubber.
"My clients are demanding this," Turner said. "You
get so standardized, it can be hard to break habits and do
things differently. this is a new way of thinking."
The walls of the Guerrero Street home are made of a thin layer
of concrete sandwiched between thick foam blocks so white
they are blinding when the sun comes out, according to workers
on the site.
":It looks kind of peculiar now, but it will take shape
and look just like a normal house," production manager
Skeeter McKitterick said.
The foam may not look very sturdy - one can chip off a piece
with just a fingernail - but it is far more durable than wood,
according to McKitterick. It is resistant to fire, termites
and the dry rot that bedevils coastal homes.
Turner's client requested the foam because of its insulation
ability. it can reduce energy bills up to 70 percent, according
to the manufacture.
"It
was hard to find a builder to do this," Miller said.
"people want to do things the way they've always
done them."
-Janine
Miller |
In
Moss Beach, Turner is assisting with a remodel using entirely
sustainable building methods.
Client Janine Miller said she wanted to be mindful of the
environment, so she spent hours researching the best materials.
Her kitchen countertops, mosaics of shimmering green glass,
are made from used Chardonnay bottles. The counter in her
bathroom is recycled windshield glass. The floors are made
from bamboo, which is actually a grass and replenishes much
faster than wood.
Other green features include linoleum made from a mixture
of cork and recycled rubber, insulation that uses mulched
newspaper mixed with flame-retardant material and 16 solar
panels on the roof.
"It was hard to find a builder to do this," Miller
said. "people want to do things the way they've always
done them."
Turner estimated that the green practices and materials added
about 10 percent to the cost of the home, although some of
that is recouped through lower utility bills.
"People are really interested in sustainable building,"
he said. "I've really gotten into it as a result of the
demand."
|