Green Building: What it is and why it matters
Green building, sustainability, and high-performance are now part of the vocabulary of new home construction. I welcome the attention brought to these important issues! But green building is a far more complex topic than that portrayed in the media, which typically focues only on specific areas like insulated windows, high-efficiency furnaces, solar panels, or recycled-content flooring.
Those products provide measurable benefits in terms of energy savings and improved use of natural resources, but genuine green builders use a systematic approach to design, construction, and the operational durability of the project. Personalizing the green building approach to each homebuyer’s needs and budget, and balancing the value that the client places on the benefits of green building are also key.
All homes leave an environmental “footprint”, and the materials we build with consume natural resources such as trees, metal ores and oil. A green builder’s goals are to reduce the amount of natural resources required to build a house, and then to lessen the amount of energy used by the house once completed.
To achieve those goals, we use building materials, products, and systems that make the best use of every resource harvested while also performing better than traditional products. For example, an engineered beam uses smaller, fast-growing trees. Twice as much of each log can be used to make an engineered beam as compared with a comparably sized “glue-lam” beam created in a sawmill. An engineered beam can also span longer, open spaces and resist warp better (a house that is free of even the smallest gaps does not waste energy).
I’m pleased to be able to offer our clients the best of both worlds – a beautiful true custom home that is built to the highest “green” standards of our time.















