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Dept.
Green Home Showcase
Off the Grid in Black Mountain
This solar home hits all the right notes.
By Maggie Cramer
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As musicians, Marina Raye, a recording artist of Native Flute
music, and Charlie Sheppard, a flute maker, wanted to create a
home that could exist in perfect harmony with the environment.
To do so, they chose to live off the grid, which required that
they carefully consider their surroundings during the building
process and that they continued to develop a close relationship
with their land once building was complete.
The
home is powered mainly by photovoltaics, or solar electricity,
with a propane-fired generator for back up. Marina and Charlie
estimate they use approximately six gallons of propane a week.
The propane is used predominately for hot water back up, cooking
and occasional clothes dryer use, although Marina dries most of
her and her husband’s clothes the old-fashioned way: on
a Mrs. Peggs Handy Clothes Line.
Designed
as a passive solar home, Casa Solara, as the homeowners call their
space, sits on a wooded, southwest-facing site sloped at about
25 degrees. Its layout is open, offering excellent day lighting.
All corners in the home, including inside and outside corners
as well as window and door openings, are rounded to soften the
home’s lines and admit more natural light. The home also
boasts high-performance windows, which help provide natural lighting
as well as insulation from the elements.
Twelve-foot,
high-mass walls give the house a built-in thermal buffer, providing
primary insulation for the home. Autoclaved active concrete—a
pumice-like material made of cement, sand, lime and water used
on the main and upper level floors—also acts as a humidity
buffer by absorbing moisture and gradually releasing it as ambient
humidity drops. This type of concrete is often referred to as
“breathable,” because it operates much like human
skin, allowing a vapor and gas exchange. Builders also used grouted
concrete block with extruded polystyrene insulation in the home’s
basement.
To
heat Marina and Charlie’s home, a radiant in-floor system
is used throughout the space. Supplemental heat is provided by
a Vermont Castings Majestic wood stove. Water for the radiant
system is mainly heated with roof-mounted solar collectors.
The
home’s altitude helps with cooling; at 3,000 feet above
sea level, cross ventilation and ceiling fans provide relief,
while the walls and floors absorb additional heat.
But
the home’s harmonization with the environment doesn’t
end at passive solar design. A rain catchment system off the metal
roof can store up to 1,500 gallons of water, and Marina and Charlie
own an ENERGY STAR® washer, as well as a Sun Frost refrigerator.
The home’s plumbing fixtures are nontoxic, and no toxicity
finishes were used in the home’s interior. Cork flooring
was used in their home’s upper-floor meditation room, and
recycled hardwood pallet flooring was used on the upper level.
Marina
and Charlie’s intimate relationship with their surroundings
also continues outside of the home itself. They’ve tended
an organic garden on their thirteen acres for two seasons now.
According to Marina, she and her husband call the lower level
of their property—where they’ve planted peach, apple,
cherry, pear, plum and fig trees—the orchard. Dozens of
blackberry and raspberry plants as well as strawberries and asparagus
accompany the fruit trees. The property also boasts a large patch
of wild raspberries, and to the home’s east lies a fenced
courtyard with native plants and edibles. Marina and Charlie plan
to incorporate more native plantings above their retaining wall
to the north and east, where soil has been disturbed. “I
expect that those plantings will provide food for wildlife, having
a positive effect on the local ecosystem,” Marina says.
“Our intention is to live gently in their (wildlife’s)
presence, because I imagine they are watching us!”
A
low-maintenance exterior with back-primed, Hardiplank® siding,
integral colored stucco, and fiber-composite decking will help
ensure that Casa Solara survives for lifetimes. And that’s
music to Marina and Charlie’s ears. “My husband and
I plan to live in this house forever,” Marina says. “We
have lived a lot of different places and feel that we have finally
arrived home to our soul house.”
SPECIFICATIONS
Location: Black Mountain Township, NC
Designer: Alice Dodson, Architect
Builder: Mark Bondurant, Rare Earth Builders,
Inc.
Size: 3,868 total square feet, including two
levels and a basement
Price tag: Approximately $708,000 total cost
Completed: December 2006
Construction type: Concrete block basement with
Wallmate extruded polystyrene insulation, upper floors are aerated
autoclaved concrete
Top Green Points
Efficiency
Solar hot water, radiant floor heat, passive solar design,
water catchment system
Low Toxicity
No OSB Advantech, no VOC Bioshield clay paint, one-coat wood sealer
Environmental
On-site organic garden, locally milled large-diameter wood, smaller
wood bucked into firewood, scraps of drywall used for garden mulching
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