smart home

I am so excited that MKD gets to be a part of the “Smart Home: Green and Wired” exhibit at the Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago. The exhibit includes a full-size mkSolaire™ home and showcases the best in sustainable living solutions. Here you can follow the journey of the exhibit as it progresses beginning from the point when the house was first built and set. Read about how it’s educating and touching the people who come to visit it.

New Site

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Please join us at our new site: www.michellekaufmann.com

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(new) Smart Home opens

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The Smart Home: Green + Wired reopens today at the Museum of Science + Industry in Chicago. With the help of Midwest Living, the tech geniuses at WIRED magazine, and the amazing MSI team, the home is filled with all new sustainable products, materials and smart systems in this spectacular home that we designed.

The earthy palette of colors uses zero-VOC paint and the furniture is made from recycled steel, FSC certified or reclaimed woods and soy-based and recycled fiber cushions. Every square inch of the home and garden is tricked out with beautiful ideas, from home automation, energy and water monitors, rain catchment, gray water systems, green roofs,wind power, solar film,LED lighting, and edible earthboxes, off-site construction, and a whole lot more. For example, this dining room table is a luscious favorite that uses a mixture of reclaimed wood (from a tree that fell on the grounds of the museum) and concrete by Barefoot Design (www.barefootdesign.com).
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To visit the house, check out the Musuem’s website
Modular construction of the Smart Home
Setting of the Smart Home
And even more

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photos by JB Spector / Museum of Science + Industry

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(new) Smart Home opens

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The Smart Home: Green + Wired reopens today at the Museum of Science + Industry in Chicago. With the help of Midwest Living, the tech geniuses at WIRED magazine, and the amazing MSI team, the home is filled with all new sustainable products, materials and smart systems in this spectacular home that we designed.

The earthy palette of colors uses zero-VOC paint and the furniture is made from recycled steel, FSC certified or reclaimed woods and soy-based and recycled fiber cushions. Every square inch of the home and garden is tricked out with beautiful ideas, from home automation, energy and water monitors, rain catchment, gray water systems, green roofs,wind power, solar film,LED lighting, and edible earthboxes, off-site construction, and a whole lot more. For example, this dining room table is a luscious favorite that uses a mixture of reclaimed wood (from a tree that fell on the grounds of the museum) and concrete by Barefoot Design (www.barefootdesign.com).
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To visit the house, check out the Musuem’s website
Modular construction of the Smart Home
Setting of the Smart Home
And even more

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Recycled Beauty

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One of the eco-principles we use when designing homes is using eco-materials – materials that are renewable or recyclable. A good example of this is to use glass tiles made of recycled glass. One of my favorite examples of beautiful recycled tile is Maienza-Wilson’s gorgeous house in Montecito (image above and below by Jim Bartsch, courtesy Maienza Wilson). They used tiles from Oceanside that were at least 50% content of recycled or post industrial glass tiles, used in different sizes, finishes, and colors. The result is modern eco-elegance in every bathroom.

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For their wine room, they used copper and wine colored glass mosaic tiles on the softly arched ceiling giving the room a liquid feel, but with warmth, similar to a wonderful glass of red wine.

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For the Smart Home: Green + Wired exhibit at the Museum of Science and Industry (the mkSolaire that I designed), we used glass tiles from Bedrock Industries that are made from chardonnay bottles. I love the poetry and history of using glass in new, modern ways that have a story behind them. The variations in the color and texture have me wondering where the various bottles came from, and a bit of connection to the past (like an old weathered wood floor).

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There are many options with varying colors, finishes, sizes, so there is a ton of design flexibility. However, currently, the recycled glass tiles do typically cost more than non-recycled glass tiles. However, the costs seem to be lowering, and hopefully will be similar to the path of organic foods with lowering costs with increased supply and demand, and will soon the cost increase will be negligible.

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So next time you are looking for tiles for your kitchen or bathroom, consider using recycled glass tiles for eco-luxury and beauty.

For more information, here are some links:
www.globallygorgeous.com
http://www.maienzawilson.com/
www.glasstile.com
MSI Smart Home 
www.bedrockindustries.com 

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Re:Vision Salon: Urban Agriculture

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Last Thursday we had a fabulous Re:Vision Salon on “Urban Agriculture” with Josiah Raisin Cain (Chief Design Officer with Design Ecology) and Urban Re:Vision. Urban Agriculture has become one of the hottest movements in the  sustainable design world. And rightly so. As Josiah described, the ideas with Urban Agriculture “are close to exploding” given recent media, products, planning and design focus. Josiah spoke about some unsettling (and for me, unknown) facts such as the average miles travelled for the average meal in the US (including miles for processing food) is 3000 miles. That is completely absurd as well as unsustainable. Another crazy fact he shared is that it takes the amount of water equivalent to one person’s showers for a year to produce one pound of beef.

Urban Edible Gardens solve many problems simultaneously. It helps reduce gas, cost, water (depending on system used), while increasing social justice and community connection. Challenges typically include space and scale. However, there are alternative ways of imagining our cities. Josiah showed projects with successful green roofs with edible gardens like this one at Trent University.

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The green roofs reduce storm water runoff, act as increased insulation, increase oxygen, reduce cooling loads, and provide local food. They can be on the top roof of the building, or be on intermediate roof gardens, like this project by Daniel Libeskind.

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And of course, you could do on your decks and walls of decks as well.

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There are alternatives to the deep soil-based gardens that make sense when we plant them in the ground. There are Hydroponic systems and Aquaponic systems that use much less water by providing their own nutrients. Companies like InkaWall (Paul Giacomantonio from Inkawall was at the Salon) offer systems like this “BioCloth” that is 1” thick and can be hung outside or inside and produces food that hangs off of the cloth, using much less water than would be required if they were planted in the ground using traditional methods.  With proper lighting and ventilation, these can even be planted inside of a building as well. You could grow your own food in your downtown loft.

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We have incorporated green roofs and used hydroponics boxes for planting food at the Smart Home exhibit (the mkSolaire) in Chicago.
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Josiah spoke about how “slick” our current city buildings are. Water slides right off of them, creating many expensive problems for the city with storm water run-off. By integrating green walls and green roofs, it has the added benefit of making the buildings more “sticky”, and reducing storm-water run-off issues for cities, and reducing the costs required to sove those problems.

It all is so delicious visually, socially and physically. It also seems accessible and feasible. Hearing Josiah, Paul and others in the group speak about their project’s successes with green walls, roofs, and integrated urban gardening systems, I am excited and can’t wait to be incorporating some of these technologies into communities I am working on.  As Paul noted, “Urban Gardens can create prosperity where there is currently zero.”

For more info:
Urban Gardens at the Smart Home in Chicago
Trent University Green Roof

Fytowall
Inka Wall
The ABLE project
Elliot Coleman
Sky Vegetables

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Photos by the very talented Paige Green. www.paigegreenphotography.com

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How green building can save the housing industry

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I just read this great article by John Wasik (author of The Cul-de-Sac Syndrome: Turning Around the Unsustainable American Dream and The Audacity of Help) on the ABC 7 website.  John writes:

“Green is gold. Why didn’t homebuilders get this idea? They could be building new homes again, employing millions, making inner cities and suburbs habitable and bring down the cost of housing for everyone.

Homebuilding needs to join the 21st century and apply the best, efficient technologies to lower costs and reduce energy and resource consumption. But the vast majority of homes have been built using the very best 19th-century, stick-built/balloon frame methods. That’s got to change if we want to revive the bedrock of the American Dream.

As it stands now, while you may have the most up-to-date flat-panel TVs, computers, cellphones and audio equipment inside your home, the basic way that most homes are built hasn’t changed much in more than 170 years.

That’s right. As microprocessors double in speed every 18 months, cellphones are becoming just as powerful as laptop computers and you can connect to nearly anyone on the planet through the Internet, the box you live in is antiquated beyond belief and costs you more every year to heat, cool and maintain.

To change this deplorable situation — and revive real estate, building and banking — it will require a change in attitude. Think of your personal living space as ecodynamic. It could adjust to the exterior environment cybernetically, tell you when the cheapest electricity is available and program the entire house to use less energy.

Is this something out of the new Star Trek movie? Hardly. Ecodynamic homes are not only being built, they are being assembled. That’s an important distinction.

Rather than building everything on site with framing and two-by-fours, modular units are pre-made to exacting specifications in factories, then loaded on flat-bed trucks and assembled on site. This not only cuts the construction time and cost from one-third to one-half, it eliminates tons of waste that end up in landfills. The end-result is energy-efficient, low-maintenance and will produce energy and conserve water.

An ecodynamic home is always working for you to reduce costs. It saves water in cisterns, prevents heat from leaking out in the winter and keeps a breeze flowing in summer. You use less energy because the house’s computer is constantly monitoring conditions and directing resources to where they are needed. Don’t need to heat or cool a spare bedroom? The system will know and cut your bills.

Sounds good so far, but aren’t these homes really ugly trailers? Throw that image out of your mind. They are loaded and secured onto permanent foundations and can be stunning.

Take a look at architect Michelle Kaufmann’s “Smart + Wired Home,” a house so innovative it’s now on display at Chicago’s Museum and Science and Industry. It’s an elegant example of a modular, green home that was factory built and constantly monitoring itself with its own eco-computer system. A flat-panel display in the living room can display a graphic that shows the cost of energy that moment, how much of it the house is consuming and the amount of electrons being produced on rooftop solar panels. If it makes more energy than you consume, you sell it back to the power company.

The Smart + Wired Home costs nine times less to heat and three times less to cool than a standard home of the same size. The gorgeous, spacious interior is full of low-voltage lighting, fixtures made of recycled materials and lets in generous amounts of light.

But this is not just a home for museums as Kaufmann hopes to mass produce these homes. If she succeeds (I’m rooting for her), she could become the Henry Ford of homebuilders. Make houses on assembly lines and their costs will come down as economies of scale will be realized. And because they are modular designs, you can easily change the layout or add on extra modules if you need to expand at a cost much lower than stick-built contracting.

What will it take to make green modular homebuilding a major industry? Policymakers will need to implement tax incentives over the next two decades, reward new home-energy technologies with grants and shift tax dollars away from wasteful road building projects into places like the inner city where decent, affordable housing is in short supply.

Some of this is already being seeded through the Obama stimulus plan and budget, although a comprehensive, long-range plan is needed. The upcoming energy/climate change bill would be an ideal place for these ideas. If we get really good at ecodynamic design and manufacturing, we’ll be able to export these products to places where durable, inexpensive and green housing is desperately needed: China, India, Africa.

Back in the US, homes needn’t be so capital intensive and push people into foreclosure and bankruptcy. They can be clean, green and affordable. They can pay us back when they produce energy. To accomplish that, we will need to re-envision the American Dream. Home is where the heart is. Now the political will needs to follow if we’re to make homeownership widespread and sustainable.”

www.johnwasik.com

www.greenrightnow.com

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Living in a Net-Zero Energy Home

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There is more and more talk about “Net-Zero Energy” Homes and “Zero Energy Buildings” (or ZEB). While this is great is many ways that “Zero is the new Black”, it also comes with the downside of some using these terms incorrectly and applying them to projects that are in fact not Net-Zero Energy.  Typically, ZEB and Net-Zero Energy are terms that apply to buildings with zero net energy consumption and zero carbon emissions annually.  Some buildings achieve this while being completely off-grid, some by having alternative energy and still connecting to the power grid, and some do it by producing alternative energy off-site.

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In our Glidehouse which is 3 bedrooms and 1566sf, Kevin and I chose to go with a 4.5kw PV solar array on our roof for producing electricity.  What we are experiencing, is that we designed and built the house with a high performance envelope, radiant heating system, Energy Star appliances, CFL and LED lights and smart design for washing surfaces with light and building a small house that feels big, that we actually produce TWICE as much electricity as we use.

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This might make our house “net-positive energy”, however, there is a lot about energy that most definitions do not take into account which is the energy used to create the building, and the embodied energy over time.

We built our house using SIPS panels to minimize waste (this is before I found out about the amazing world of Modular which saves even more waste), and we chose materials that are long-lasting and do not require maintenance. One of my favorite choices is our Cor-ten steel siding that has a beautiful velvet color, and since it is a rusted metal, we are never going to have to paint it, seal it, or replace it (which all would require energy and add to one’s carbon footprint).

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What we are finding is that living in a net-zero energy home means that we have all the luxuries and usage that we want, yet ZERO guilt.  And, ZERO electric bills.  With energy costs being as unpredictable and volatile as they are, a predictable zero electric bill is a big bonus.

And we are considering selling our extra energy that we are producing to neighbors to have money for champagne.  Zero cost for champange? Now that is something.

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The Cul-de-Sac Syndrom: Turning Around the Unsustainable American Dream

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On my trip this past weekend to Denver for the CNU (Congress for New Urbanism) conference, it seemed appropriate to be reading John Wasik’s new book, “The Cul-de-Sac Syndrome: Turning Around the Unsustinable American Dream” while I was on the plane.

Wasik is one of my favorite writers at Bloomberg and the Huffington Post.In the book, Wasik looks at many of the causes of our housing crisis as well as offers thought-provoking ideas on possible solutions through a series of interviews with thought leaders and the latest studies and statistics.

John Wasik and I have become friends and have met on a number of occasions during the past years. During some of our discussions when he was supposedly interviewing me for this book, he would ask questions and offer ideas, that in fact, I was the one who left our meetings feeling curious and inspired. In the chapter titled “Building Smarter”, Wasik focuses on the mkSolaire as the exhibit at the Museum of Science and Industry titled “The Smart Home: Green + Wired”. Wasik analyzes not only the sustainable materials, systems and process, but raises many good thoughts and questions about cost and how cost and financing is so integral to planning and the result of what and how homes are built.

While I was in the plane reading the book, and nearing descent, I gazed down at the landscape below, filled with various patterns of homes and communities. Instead of seeing the roofs as asphalt or shingles, I imagined green roofs, solar, and wind generation. Rather than the kidney shape pools, I imagined swimming ponds and rain catchment gardens. I imagined different patterns of density and mass transit.

It is all possible. And it is such an interesting time to work to make it happen.

www.culdesacsyndrome.com

Here are some things that others are saying about John’s book:

“John Wasik’s The Cul-de-Sac Syndrome offers enough to chew on for three sets of teeth, enough to digest for three stomachs, and the alerts the mind faster than an approaching siren.”
–Ralph Nader, Consumer advocate

“Get ready for a totally original look at the American dream. Wasik delivers the first truly multidisciplinary examination—using planning, law, architecture, and history to focus on working solutions that can keep the dream alive. This is a winner!”
— Paul B. Farrell, JD, PhD. Columnist, MarketWatch.com and author of The Millionaire Code

“This excellent book takes a ground-level look at the causes of our housing crisis and offers a myriad of ideas on reinventing the concepts of home and community.”
—Ilyce R. Glink, syndicated real estate columnist, author of 100 Questions Every First-Time Home Buyer Should Ask

“A genuine kick to the head, showing how our individual quests for the biggest house on the hill is destroying our environment, the economy, and our health. But The Cul-de-Sac Syndrome is no dead end. It offers a new, green, urbanized promised land with real community, more free time, and a higher living standard. It’s a masterful blueprint to unpave paradise and restore the world we cherish.”
— Laurence Kotlikoff, Co-author of Spend ‘Til the End: The Revolutionary Guide to Raising Your Living Standard—Today and When You Retire, and Professor of Economics at Boston University

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see you at chicago’s green festival!

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In case anyone hasn’t heard of it before, the Green Festival is a fabulous event that celebrates all things eco-friendly and that’s held annually in five cities across the U.S., each at different times of the year. It’s organized jointly by Global Exchange and Green America and showcases more than 350 diverse local and national green businesses, over 100 speakers, and offers visitors great how-to workshops, information on green careers, a Fair Trade pavilion, Youth Unity Pavilion, kids’ activities, delicious organic beer, wine and cuisine, and live music. This Saturday I will have the great pleasure of speaking at the Chicago Green Fest about the Smart Home: Green + Wired exhibit we helped create at Chicago’s Museum of Science and Industry.  My talk will be at 2pm, followed by a signing of my new book, Prefab Green.  Hope to see you there!

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legoSolaire on display at smart home

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The newly reopened Smart Home: Green + Wired exhibit at Chicago’s Museum of Science and Industry has been so drastically reimagined and redesigned for it’s second run that it’s almost hard to believe it’s the same house we designed and built for the Museum last year. Among the things we’re most excited to see in Smart Home 2.0 are all the great new gadgets and gizmos for kids. But it’s the lowest-tech, most old-school kid’s toy that we love the most: the Smart Home made entirely out of legos. This tiny replica of the actual mkSolaire is surprisingly true to the original, with it’s cement board and Ipe wood siding, glass doored garage, and even green roof.

Read the rest of this entry »

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michellemichelle's green tip
quotesMake take-out nights a waste-free event by asking restaurants to hold the plastic utensils and condiment packets...
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