| Living The LEED Life in the CV |
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By Kathy & Thom Gottberg (3/9/10)
Green architect Lance O’Donnell, his wife Regina Basterrechea, and son Jonathan have lived in their green LEED Home for nearly one year. The O’Donnell home, located in the Chino Canyon area of Palm Springs, is the only Platinum LEED Certified house in the entire Coachella Valley. Currently only a hand full of homes have been certified at this level throughout the US. But beyond the designation, what is it like to really live in a custom designed, green and eco-friendly home? Surprisingly, what seems to be the most rewarding to the O’Donnells are the ineffable qualities of living in a home that allows them to celebrate the desert that they love, spend comfortable time with each other and friends, and ultimately serve to uplift their souls.
The process of building a home like the O’Donnell house was
just that—a process. A lifetime of
ideas went into the design elements and then over a year into the actual
building
What
are the primary elements in the home?
Probably the most dramatic feature is that the home has three times more
glass than a traditional design.
The glass enhances the light and view from every direction making it,
according to Lance O’Donnell, “the house is like Stonehenge, marking the
passing of time and season.
It’s sits on the Earth in a way that’s much greater than a house. It’s really about the sun and our
specific place on the planet.”
Still, all the glass and the views are strategically placed so that the
house utilizes the best of the sun in a passive-solar design. Lance goes on to say, “It’s a
comfortable place to live in from a tactical level where the floors are always
warm, the views are always spectacular, (and the) overhangs cut down the
glare. A passive-solar home heats
when you need it, but none of that heat when you don’t.”
More
features that added points to the LEED rating include the concrete floors and
counters with fly ash, earth sheltering features, bamboo ceiling, special water
reduction plumbing features, water recapture elements and no VOC (volatile
The
best test of the house’s efficiency comes from the utility bills. According to the O’Donnells, the temperature never went below 65 degrees during this past winter and they never
once used the furnace. Due to the
sun’s stored radiant energy the house feels 3-5 degrees warmer in the winter
than the thermostat indicates.
When asked about summertime efficiency, Regina said, “our energy bills
during the summer were about $8 at the most—so we are on track to be a net-zero
energy building. And we don’t use
much gas either because we have a tankless hot water heater.”
Lance
likes to use the word “grid neutral” because it more closely refers to the
direct offsetting of electrical energy usage. Much of their utilities in their 2,300 square foot home are
offset by the 750 square feet of solar panels on their roof, which generates a
little over 5kW. Their
original calculations were that those panels would cover 90% of their energy
needs but they actually generated more like 115% during the last year. The O’Donnells have also recently
signed up with SCE to take advantage of the new California AB 510 that allows
homeowners to sell back any surplus energy that their system generates, or at
the very least roll that over into future usage. This is a new program so the details haven’t all been worked
out including how much SCE will pay for the surplus, but it is positive
progress for solar energy and the people who invest in the technology.
But
what the O’Donnells seem most excited about is what it means to live in a home
that was both custom and site designed.
As Lance says, “my favorite thing about the house is that I now like t
On
a practical level, Regina loves the neighborhood so that “we can ride our bikes
down to coffee and we don’t have to cross a bunch of cars and traffic.” Her favorite feature in the house is
the central kitchen which is described as “the cockpit” of the home where she
can see everywhere in and out of the house and feel a part of it. She also appreciated the privacy and
security that the site and home design offers. The only disadvantage appears to be that with concrete
floors a person cannot be content to merely run a vacuum and be done with cleaning. Also, having a home that a person is
very proud of requires a bit more attention to keeping countertops and cabinets
in pristine condition. According
to his parents, their son Jonathan likes the different levels in the home and
the swimming pool. He also likes
it that his father is spending lots more time there with them both.
The
benefits of
Lance
is using what he has learned and observed in his home and putting it to work at
his business. He says, “It’s like
a laboratory. We didn’t know it
would perform so well. And it’s also a great learning tool—we’ve learned a lot
about how to live more ecologically.“
o2 is presently involved in a number of residential remodels and he
finds that lots of people are making choices to be energy efficient. His advice to all homeowners today is to look for the
low-hanging fruit of energy efficiency.
Regina adds, “try to spend some time making the envelope more efficient.“ About the only thing that the O’Donnells
say they might do differently would be to make the home smaller because they
aren’t using one of the rooms.
Still, Lance finds that more than anything, people don’t want to give up
any space in homes today. He
suggests that people really ask themselves, “What do you really need spatially?” Repeatedly the O’Donnells expressed the joy they get from living in their green home. They are extremely proud of their creation and as Regina says, “we appreciate that people want to see it and love sharing it. Not surprisingly, the sustainable features are so much a part of the design that it is nearly impossible to think of them as indistinguishable from the people who live there and call it home. Maybe that feature is what makes it a true platinum home. *Note: The O'Donnell house is slated to be a part of the upcoming 5th Annual Desert Garden Tour on Sunday, April 11, 2010 from 12:45 to 3:30 p.m. for more details go to the Coachella Valley Green Event Calendar for April 11th.
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