Index Investing News
Saturday, April 25, 2026
No Result
View All Result
  • Login
  • Home
  • World
  • Investing
  • Financial
  • Economy
  • Markets
  • Stocks
  • Crypto
  • Property
  • Sport
  • Entertainment
  • Opinion
  • Home
  • World
  • Investing
  • Financial
  • Economy
  • Markets
  • Stocks
  • Crypto
  • Property
  • Sport
  • Entertainment
  • Opinion
No Result
View All Result
Index Investing News
No Result
View All Result

A House That Is as Green as It Gets

by Index Investing News
May 5, 2023
in Property
Reading Time: 5 mins read
A A
0
Home Property
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter


This article is part of our Design special section about making the environment a creative partner in the design of beautiful homes.


Eleven years ago, Sally Liu, a water-resources engineer, and her husband Bay Chang, then a senior research scientist for Google, bought a 0.84-acre lot for $2.675 million in suburban Hillsborough, Calif. Avid environmentalists in their mid-40s with two young sons, they set out to build something different from the neighborhood’s overblown mansions and closer to their hearts: a green energy home.

“I really did not want a large house next to a lawn,” said Ms. Liu, who is now 56 and advises for the Nature Conservancy.

The couple hired Aidlin Darling Design, a San Francisco firm, to build what the architects would come to call the “House of Earth and Sky.” Joshua Aidlin and Peter Larsen, the principals on the project, had ample experience with LEED, an evolving national standard for green buildings. And the couple wanted, and received, no less than the highest of the four LEED certifications: platinum.

“Sally and Bay had been to a friend’s rammed-earth home, and had fallen in love with the material,” Mr. Larsen recalled, referring to the compacted soil used in ancient constructions and many contemporary, sustainable ones. Ms. Liu’s desire for a drought-resistant garden was another prominent theme.

Within a week, the owners had a working model. Its ecological strategies for a durable, all-electric home were incorporated in a sculptural composition of rammed earth and glass walls, clerestory windows and blackened wood cladding, all customized for the partially sloped site.

“It was a diagram for sustainability,” Mr. Aidlin said. “The forms all had a function.” But before their clients settled on the version they built in 2015, the architects added Ron Lutsko, a landscape architect, and Gary Hutton, an interior designer, to the creative team.

Intended for intergenerational living — in itself a green idea — the 7,477-square-foot enclave (including basement) is not monolithic. It has three public and private zones linked by insulated glass-walled walkways shaded by steel trellises or roof overhangs. The sections are laid out in a U shape around a central limestone courtyard dotted with garden beds and block-like stone benches where the family and friends can gather.

“We wanted an abundant connection to the outdoors from every space,” Mr. Aidlin said. So the entire light-filled indoor-outdoor composition sits at the center of a garden.

If you are a guest, you can climb from the car court at street level, through an entry garden of native grasses and up a flight of stairs to the formal front door. Turning right from the foyer takes you into Mr. Chang’s sanctum, where he keeps his prized board game collection. Turning left leads to a 65-foot long, open-plan sequence of living spaces on the north edge of the courtyard. This 1,000-square-foot area is lit with LED pendants and finished with nontoxic or low-VOC materials that have the downside, Ms. Liu noted, of degrading with powerful sunlight. (Though automated blinds have reduced the impact, the stained floors have faded to natural walnut.)

Beyond the public space is a private area containing bedrooms and gardens for the couple and their sons, who are now adults. A glass-walled bridge that borders a reflecting pond links the living/bedroom wing to a poolside pavilion on the south side of the central courtyard. The pavilion contains a family room and guest spaces for the couple’s parents.

The modern design inconspicuously incorporates water- and energy-conservation features. Retractable steel-and-glass doors open onto the courtyard from different sides of the house, offering a sleek visual contrast to the exterior walls and allowing for cross ventilation.

Those beautifully striated 18-inch-thick walls, made of compacted soil gathered from the site, were engineered by David Easton, an inventor in Napa, Calif., who concocted the blend of sand, earth and Portland cement. They are low-maintenance and rot-resistant, and their thermal mass shields the interiors from outdoor temperature fluctuations. This feature minimizes the use of hydronic heating and cooling systems embedded in the wood-covered concrete floors inside.

Asymmetrical “butterfly” roofs rest lightly above the living area and combined pool and guesthouse. Their wide wings angle upward so that out-of-sight arrays of photovoltaic solar panels absorb maximum sunlight that is converted to electricity and sent to the grid. The house produces and stores enough energy to power all needs, though a Tesla battery, to be used during storm-related blackouts, is still to come.

The V-shaped roofs double as rain collectors and drain into a 5,000-gallon underground cistern that preserves runoff for nonpotable purposes like irrigation. A 500-gallon cistern under the pool deck likewise collects used household water for the gardens, which Mr. Lutsko populated with native live oaks and with species he jokingly calls “honorary natives,” like Mediterranean Jerusalem sage and olive trees.

Because the site slopes up from the car court, the architects were able to excavate a subterranean floor for a garage, family entrance, wine cellar, utility rooms and the base of a rectangular concrete tower three stories tall.

The tower is just wide enough to contain a steel spiral staircase that rises past the living rooms on the main level, up to a third-story crow’s nest. The slender tower is not an architectural conceit, but a passive stack effect cooling chimney with a motorized window at the top to ventilate the interiors when they get hot and simultaneously pull cooler air up from the basement.

“It could have been automated but Sally and Bay did not mind being active users,” Mr. Larsen said.

Several years later, the combination of passive- and engineered-solar power seems to work as planned. At first, not fully trusting the energy systems they had invested in, Ms. Liu monitored everything closely. “I am an engineer who loves spreadsheets,” she said. “The goal was to be net-zero energy, and I was relieved the solar numbers met the goal.” That is partly because with many days in the 80s, the pool rarely requires heating.

Ms. Liu can now divert more of her attention to her other environmental causes, which she tends from a home office. The room’s raised floor gives her views of the gardens even from her desk.

“It all looks natural. I can see a ‘meadow’ and the hills on one side. In the other direction, I look at a ‘forest’ of trees,” she said. “And this wonderful house is simply a conservation cipher for others to decode.”



Source link

Tags: greenHouse
ShareTweetShareShare
Previous Post

The right doctor is worth the wait

Next Post

Harris to meet with tech CEOs about AI regulation

Related Posts

DOJ Drops Powell Probe, Clearing Path For Warsh As Fed Chair

DOJ Drops Powell Probe, Clearing Path For Warsh As Fed Chair

by Index Investing News
April 25, 2026
0

The DOJ dropped its criminal probe of Fed Chair Jerome Powell Friday, clearing a key Senate hurdle for Kevin Warsh’s...

Just Listed | 8801 Wellington View Drive

Just Listed | 8801 Wellington View Drive

by Index Investing News
April 17, 2026
0

Fully reimagined Extended Portland model for Sale in Wellington View WONDERFUL IN WELLINGTON VIEW5 Beds | 4.5 Baths This highly sought-after,...

‘Spectacular’ Stone Estate Built With 100-Year-Old River Beams Lists in Westchester for .8 Million: ‘The Pinnacle of Guard Hill’

‘Spectacular’ Stone Estate Built With 100-Year-Old River Beams Lists in Westchester for $5.8 Million: ‘The Pinnacle of Guard Hill’

by Index Investing News
April 13, 2026
0

A stone mansion in Westchester County that was built as an enduring homage to the spectacular estates of old has...

Two Midwesterners Found Their Oasis in the New Mexico Desert

Two Midwesterners Found Their Oasis in the New Mexico Desert

by Index Investing News
April 9, 2026
0

When Karina Peggau and Kain Lager-Lowe gave themselves a single weekend to find a new house in a city they...

Break Through to a New Level of Production In 120 Days

Break Through to a New Level of Production In 120 Days

by Index Investing News
April 21, 2026
0

What if someone told you there was a program that could help you secure nine signed real estate agreements in...

Next Post
Harris to meet with tech CEOs about AI regulation

Harris to meet with tech CEOs about AI regulation

Gia Giudice Says Her Aunt Melissa Gorga Has Completely Blocked Her on Social Media

Gia Giudice Says Her Aunt Melissa Gorga Has Completely Blocked Her on Social Media

RECOMMENDED

Trump’s win: India should adapt to a shift in how the US engages the world

Trump’s win: India should adapt to a shift in how the US engages the world

November 6, 2024
Ripple Launches New Stablecoin to Speed up Cross-Border Funds

Ripple Launches New Stablecoin to Speed up Cross-Border Funds

October 15, 2024
Volkswagen Q3 earnings weighed down by cost of Porsche listing, Argo AI By Reuters

Volkswagen Q3 earnings weighed down by cost of Porsche listing, Argo AI By Reuters

October 28, 2022
Goldman Sachs treasurer in talks to potentially leave bank, FT reports By Reuters

Goldman Sachs treasurer in talks to potentially leave bank, FT reports By Reuters

February 23, 2024
On Monitor to Retire a Millionaire After Dwelling Paycheck to Paycheck

On Monitor to Retire a Millionaire After Dwelling Paycheck to Paycheck

October 18, 2024
May You Program the Subsequent Killer App?

May You Program the Subsequent Killer App?

May 12, 2025
Factbox-US offshore wind projects facing inflation headwinds By Reuters

Factbox-US offshore wind projects facing inflation headwinds By Reuters

September 11, 2023
Global insurance losses in 2023 exceed 0B for fourth straight year, Aon says (NYSE:AON)

Global insurance losses in 2023 exceed $100B for fourth straight year, Aon says (NYSE:AON)

January 28, 2024
Index Investing News

Get the latest news and follow the coverage of Investing, World News, Stocks, Market Analysis, Business & Financial News, and more from the top trusted sources.

  • 1717575246.7
  • Browse the latest news about investing and more
  • Contact us
  • Cookie Privacy Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • DMCA
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • xtw18387b488

Copyright © 2022 - Index Investing News.
Index Investing News is not responsible for the content of external sites.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • World
  • Investing
  • Financial
  • Economy
  • Markets
  • Stocks
  • Crypto
  • Property
  • Sport
  • Entertainment
  • Opinion

Copyright © 2022 - Index Investing News.
Index Investing News is not responsible for the content of external sites.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In