Flushing Away Cash? Replace Your Toilets Now
Posted on: July 23, 20092 comments so far (is that a lot?)
Greenovation Evaluation – Energy Detectives Part II
Posted on: July 15, 20091 comment so far
During the Greenovation Evaluation of Dr. Anna Marie’s home, the Greenalysis Team finds virtually zero insulation, an ultra-wasteful toilet, an inefficient oil furnace, a 36 year old water tank, and more wallet busters than you can shake a Benjamin at.
About 58 million homes in the U.S. have no insulation at all. Yet, it’s one of the easiest ways that you can save energy and lower your monthly bills. The team recommends a new castor oil based spray foam insulation in all of the walls and the attic.
Unbelievably, the original gas water heater from 1973 is still working. Lowering your water heater to 120 degrees can lower your energy use by 5 – 10%. Insulating your tank with an inexpensive tank wrap can help keep the water hot when not in use. Dr. Anna Marie has decided to install a new Rheem solar hot water heater to reduce her carbon footprint even further and ensure a comfortable flow of hot water.
Dr. Anna Marie bought the home with its original oil furnace. After recycling the old tank, she’ll be installing a state-of-the-art geothermal heat pump to heat and cool the home year round for a fraction of the energy of a traditional furnance and a/c. It’s a great choice made even more affordable by the new 30% tax credit from the federal government. The EPA calls geothermal the most efficient home comfort system available.
Anna Marie’s old-old school toilet uses about 5 gallons per flush!! She’s wasting over 8,000 gallons of water per year. She’ll be installng a new high-efficiency toilet with a dual flush sytem – half flush and full flush. The half flush will use only .8 gallons and will be almost impossible to clog. The complete list of recommended improvements for Dr. Anna Marie’s home can be found on her website www.TerraVerdeTV.com and more information can be found on how you can improve your home at www.Greenovation.TV
How to Make Your Own Rain Barrel: Mustache Not Included
Posted on: June 29, 20091 comment so far
In the Summer homeowners may use 40% of their water for their lawn and garden. With water rationing happening all over the country and 36 states predicted to have “catastrophic” water shortages by 2013, now is the time to start using rain barrels to collect water for your outdoor use.
Here’s a step by step video showing you how.
PLACES TO BUY RAINBARRELS:
LEARN MORE:
GREEN FLIP: “If You Green It . . . You’ll Sell It!”
Posted on: May 22, 2009No comments yet
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Chris Pelitz from the Planet Green show “Greenovate” talks about how doing a green remodel and upgrading your home to be more energy efficient can make it sell fast . . . even in a depressed real estate market.
Check out the FREE Ultimate Greenovation Tax Credit and Rebate Guide
LOL for ROI: Dumb Blonde Gets FREE Energy Efficient Windows
Posted on: May 15, 2009No comments yet
Anyone who’s looking to greenovate has heard it before “if you do this it will pay for itself.” Greenovation can save you a lot of money and efficiency upgrades can pay for themselves in a short time. The accountants call this ROI (Return on Investment).
It goes like this: if you install a 1.5 gallon per minute high-efficiency showerhead you’ll save so much hot water that you’ll make back the cost of the product in just a few months. If the product costs $50, but it saves you $150 per year ($1,500 in 10 years!!) the showerhead “pays for itself” in just 4 months and your ROI is 3,000% over 10 years!! Holy Crap! It’s true. So, remind me . . . why don’t you have a 1.5 gpm showerhead yet?
Check out GREENandSAVE.com (fantastic site) to find your ROI on dozens of items like skylights, new furnace, weather sealing, geothermal, solar and much more.
Here’s the ROI for Energy Efficient Windows:
| Payback Time in Years |
Added Cost |
Annual SAVINGS |
10 Year SAVINGS |
Return on Investment (ROI): |
2.3 $700 $300 $3,000 42.9%
Here’s a little story I got from Dr. Anna Marie this morning. I couldn’t resist sharing:
“Last year I replaced all the windows in my house with that expensive double-pane energy efficient kind, and today, I got a call from the contractor who installed them.
He was complaining that the work had been completed a whole year ago and I still hadn’t paid for them.
Hellloooo,…………just because I’m blonde doesn’t mean that I am automatically stupid. So, I told him just what his fast talking sales guy had told me last year, that in ONE YEAR these windows would pay for themselves!
Helllooooo? It’s been a year! I told him. There was only silence at the other end of the line, so I finally just hung up.
He never called back. I bet he felt like an idiot.”
I’d love to hear your ROI stories. Send them along by clicking here. Occasionally, contractors trying to capitalize on “going green” can puff the sales pitch a bit. This doesn’t help the cause to green every home in America. So, we need to be honest about our numbers. Green in your house can definitely save you green in your wallet. But saving resources to create an enriched and sustainable world may be an even better cause.
GREENOVATION TIPS & RESOURCES: [Matt's advice: Don't bother with any showerhead that uses more that 1.75 gallons per minute (gpm)]
High-efficiency showerheads:
Bricor: 1 gpm – 1.5 gpm showerheads – shop here
Kohler: Forte 1.75 gpm – buy here
Hansgrohe: Croma E 75 Green 1-Jet Showerhead 1.6 gpm – buy here
Shop for dozens of low-flow showerheads here: EcoVillageGreen.com
GREENandSAVE.com great site to find ROI on items to greenovate your home
How to Save Water and Not Have to Wait for it to Get Hot
Posted on: May 13, 20094 comments so far (is that a lot?)
From: Tim Carter / AskTheBuilder.com
Many people wait for hot water just as you do each morning. A similar thing happens when people operate other sinks, dishwashers and washing machines. Fortunately, this problem can be solved one of two ways depending upon how your plumbing system is designed. Keep in mind that the work to achieve your goal is not something the average do-it-yourselfer can tackle.
Clean water is a valuable natural resource and it should not be wasted. The trouble is, in many localities, water is a very cheap commodity. When prices are low, people tend to waste. For example, a cubic foot of water costs me just a little over 1.6 cents. There is a very good possibility that you waste less than a tenth of a cubic foot of water each morning. To prove this, assume that there is 25 linear feet of three quarter inch piping between your shower faucet and water heater. Do the math and you will find out that there is just .076 cubic feet of water inside the water pipe. To waste one dollar’s worth of water, one would have to take over 800 showers. READ MORE
NOTES & RESOURCES:
Hot Water Recirculating Pump With Timers will cost about $150 – $300
Home Depot – Recirculating Pump
Amazon.com – Recirculating Pump
Green Stuff We Recommend (or How We Greened Our 107 Year Old Home)
Posted on: May 5, 20098 comments so far (is that a lot?)
1. Energy Efficiency:

Geothermal heating, cooling and hot water – We used Envision by Waterfurnace is 30 SEER a/c; up to 500%. (5 COP). Read the article about our system in MetroMode Magazine. Learn more about geothermal.
Find a contractor anywhere in the U.S.
Geothermal Contractors in Ann Arbor:
Meadowlark Builders, (734) 332-1500
Michigan Energy Services, (888) 339-7700
Haley Mechanical, WaterFurnace vendor (800) 871-7993
Jetstream Heating & Cooling, Geocomfort System – Tom Fauser (734) 668-8010
Fact: U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has said geothermal heat pumps are, “the most energy-efficient, environmentally clean, and cost-effective space conditioning systems available today.”
Occupancy sensors Wattstopper on all light switches – turns off lights automatically in unoccupied rooms. California now requires these in all new home construction.
Installed by Dan Delzoppo Electric 734-930-1630 – Our favorite contractor!
Available at Gross Electric in 2232 South Industrial Hwy., Ann Arbor, MI 48104 (734) 665-8676
Available online at EcoHaus
Cellulose Insulation: blown cellulose made from recycled newspaper. R-50 in attic / R-18 in walls. Attics can be easy DIY projects. But, for walls we strongly recommend a professional with the right equipment and experience to ensure proper fill. Learn more
Installed by:
Farmer’s Insulation in Ann Arbor – Guy Murphy (734) 769-0066
Note: Our infrared camera test showed excellent coverage. Great job Guy!!
Open-cell spray foam insulation in basement between foundation and floor framing. Provides an excellent air and thermal barrier. This is also an excellent choice for attics and walls.
Arbor Insulation
734.786.1664
Energy Star appliances – Helpful hint: For 50% – 75% off on energy efficient appliances look for a Sears Appliance Outlet Store near you (there’s one in Livonia and Taylor, MI)
Change to appliances that have earned the ENERGY STAR, and you could save hundreds of dollars a year in energy costs, while saving the environment.
Energy-saving light fixtures; compact fluorescent lights throughout
“A household that invested $90 in changing 30 fixtures to CFLs would save $440 to $1,500 over the five-year life of the bulbs, depending on your cost of electricity. Look at your utility bill and imagine a 12% discount to estimate the savings.” The End of the Light Bulb as We Know It. US News & World Report, 19 December 2007.
Easy Do-it-Yourself Items to eliminate air leaks and gaps in your house:
Great Stuff foam for sealing around window casings, basement gaps, chimneys, attics, etc. When you add up all the little gaps in your house, it can be the equivalent of leaving a window open all year long. Check out the Great Stuff website “Interactive House” for cool tips on sealing your home.
Rope Caulk to help seal those pesky gaps in your old windows. Available in brown or gray. You can purchase rope caulk online or at any local hardware or home improvement store. Cost: $5.25
Reel lawn mower – German made by Brill Luxus. Weighs only 17 lbs and easier to push than a gas mower. Zero Carbon and ultra-quiet.
Check out the Brill Luxus 38 and the all new Brill Razor Cut 38
We LOVE these mowers!! This ain’t your granddaddy’s push mower. You’ll wonder why anyone uses hard to push, noisy, smelly, polluting gas mowers.

Smart Strip – WE LOVE THIS!! Power strip designed to kill that Vampire Power that is sucking hundreds of watts . . . even when you’re not using your electronics. Click “shut down” on your computer or “off” on your TV remote and it will automatically turn off all the peripherals too – DVD, Wii, surround sound, printer, fax, hard drives, or whatever. It will pay for itself in a few short months. Available online at Amazon and other retailers.

2. Water Efficiency:
The Average U.S. Home Uses 300 – 700 gallons per day! Look for the new EPA Watersense label for outstanding water savings.
High efficiency 1.5 gpm Bricor showerheads and .5 gpm faucet aerators
A family of 3 will save around 11,000 gallons of HOT water every year. This is not only a water saver, but a huge energy saver as well. This brilliant technology will pay for itself in as little as 7 months!! Every shower should have one of these. No more excuses. Simply the best shower you can get.
Online Retailers $64.95: Black Energy and EFI
Caroma High Efficiency Toilets (HET) – dual flush allows for half flush (.8 gallons) or full flush (1.6 gallons). Caroma is beautifully designed. And, with a 4″ trap, they are nearly impossible to clog. Can save thousands of gallons of water per year. They’ll pay for themselves in a few years. Other Brands to Look For: Kohler, Sterling and Toto too!
Find a Caroma Retailer: http://www.caromausa.com/distributors/
Available online: BuyPlumbing for under $400
Rainwater capture used for irrigation – We got ours made from reused Michigan oak wine barrels from St. Julian Winery. There are plenty of places to buy rain barrels or you can make your own. Believe it or not, for every inch of rain that falls on a catchment area of 1,000 square feet, you can expect to collect approximately 600 gallons of rainwater. 5 inches of rain falling on a 2,000 square foot roof area will generate about 6,000 gallons of rainwater!
3. Materials:
Bioshield Floor Coatings. Antique heart pine floors sanded then refinished using natural penetrating Bioshield Hard Oil #9 for a durable, water resistant and non-toxic finish. You can often catch great closeout deals on the Bioshield website.
Shower & Bath Tiles made with Recycled Content – American Olean – Available at Lowes and other tile retailers. Find a retailer
Salvaged clawfoot tub from Craigslist.org – For refinishing the interior of the tub, we used (and highly recommend) Ron Benedict of Ann Arbor Perma-Glaze
New Hudson MI 48165 (US)
Phone: 248-437-1370
Bathroom floors made from second hand marble. Highly durable.
Medicine chest mirror made from antique picture frame.

Other Materials Considerations:
Reused salvaged trimwork wherever possible
Sustainably Harvested Wood: When buying new wood, insist on Forest Stewardship Council‘s FSC Certiciation or Rainforest Alliance Certification.
Donate excess materials for reuse – Habitat for Humanity Restore or Ann Arbor Reuse Center
Compost bins for yard and kitchen scraps
1 Gallon trash can in kitchen – prevents us from creating too much waste for landfill
Compost pail at kitchen sink to collect kitchen scraps for compost – not the disposal or trash.
Reclaimed brick walkways – reuses material and minimizes stormwater runoff.
4. Indoor Environmental Quality:
Fact: Indoor air is sometimes three times more polluted than outdoor air. According to the EPA, poor indoor air quality is considered to be one of the top 5 hazards to human health. Paints and finishes, furniture, flooring, wood & cabinet adhesives, mold and poor ventilation are among the leading causes.

Third Party Certification for Indoor Air Quality: Look for Green Seal or GreenGuard certification.
Zero-VOC Paints: These are the best small brands are superior paints for everyone, but particularly for the chemically sensitive: Safecoat, Yolo Colorhouse,
Major brands (sometimes cost a little less and are now widely available) FreshAire Choice from Home Depot, Olympic Premium Paint (Available at Lowes), Pittsburgh Paints, Sherwin Williams Harmony (NOTE: Harmony is NOT GreenSeal or GreenGuard Certified and is only a “low”-VOC rather than zero-VOC) and others. Just make sure you ask for Zero-VOC paint at the paint or hardware store.
Wood floor finish: For our antique heart pine we used Bioshield Hard Oil #9 (see above) Different coatings are suited for different woods. So, make sure you ask what is best for your wood floor. Also, check out the premium line of eco-friendly finishes from SafeCoat. Bioshield and SafeCoat are both available online at www.EcoHaus.com
Whispergreen Panasonic high-efficiency motion sensor bath fan – improves indoor air quality, reduces mold and uses minimal energy. This fan is virtually silent and uses very little energy. We love it!
Available at
Gross Electric – 2232 South Industrial Hwy., Ann Arbor, 734-665-8676
Online at WestsideWholesale ($130 – $160) Plumber’s Surplus ,

Zero or Low-VOC Adhesives: Henkel Green Series zero-VOC adhesive for sub-floor in new bathroom. You will love the ways these clean up!! No more nasty chemicals to remove the other nasty chemicals that get stuck on your hands. Best of all . . . almost NO SMELL.
Furniture: antiques or reused are the best – Craigslist, Freecycle, or eBay – But, if you must buy new make sure it is durable and free from toxic brominated flame retardants (PBDEs / BFRs), PVC or formaldehyde and is made from FSC or Rainforest Alliance certified wood. Many major brands are going green. Check these out: Pottery Barn, Crate & Barrel, Lee, Bob Williams+Mitchell Gold. Also, look for products that are C2C (Cradle 2 Cradle) certified.
Rugs and Floor coverings made from natural materials – free from toxic flame retardants (PBDE) or vinyl
Our Wish List:
Energy Recovery Ventilator – ventilate fresh air and recover 80% of heat loss ($700 – $2,000 installed)
Solar and/or Wind Power to provide our remaining energy load ($30k-$50k)
Solatubes for natural daylighting in the closets and dark spaces. ($300 each)
More forward thinking political leaders
Tell us what is on your greenovation wish list . . .
How to Harvest and Filter Rainwater
Posted on: May 1, 20098 comments so far (is that a lot?)
By Matt @ GreenovationTV

Imagine if fresh water for your home fell magically from the sky to nourish your family – or your fish. Sounds crazy? Well, believe it or not, fresh water falls from the sky every time it rains!
All seriousness aside . . . here’s some facts:
1,000 square feet of roof can capture 600 gallons of water with only 1″ of rainfall.
Only 5% of household water use is for drinking.
Pam & Stan, from the fantastic blog Urban Survivalists, have a great solution. They are completing a rainwater harvesting system that filters water so completely that you can drink it without fear of contamination. This will help their city, Portland, Oregon, be more sustainable. (Check out how they did it.)
Like most cities, Portland
still has combined sewer systems.
In this outdated system, 100% the water that comes into our homes is fresh, potable water. 100% the water that goes out is polluted. In essence, we are peeing and pooping in our drinking water. We take a few ounces of pee and turn it into several gallons of waste.
All of this wasted water is drained into sewer pipes which is combined with storm-water and sent to a wasted-water treatment plant (“wastewater” is a misnomer).
Then, the expensive, wasteful and polluting process is repeated. Often, some of the untreated sewage and runoff from a rain event gets dumped directly into a river, stream or ocean.
Creating a rain harvesting system reduces run off and helps make our rivers and beaches safer while still meeting modern human needs.
My small town of Ann Arbor, Michigan is about to spend $140 million dollars on a new wasted-water treatment plant. Maybe we could reduce the size of this plant, or eliminate it altogether, by transitioning to smarter systems that work together with our natural environment.
Check out Urban Survivalist‘s detailed, step-by-step instructions to make your own rainwater capture and filtration system.
Click here for more information on how drinking water is treated
Click here for a video of a dancing cat
WaterSense: How to find money saving toilets & faucets
Posted on: April 30, 20095 comments so far (is that a lot?)

Look for the WaterSense logo when buying toilets and faucets.
Water is a fast-depleting natural resource. By 2013, 36 U.S. states are predicted to face catastrophic water shortages. You can save yourself some money and water by looking for the EPA’s new WaterSense label. It’s like EnergyStar for water.
The WaterSense program was designed by the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to encourage water efficiency in the U.S. The WaterSense label is used on toilets and faucets that are certified by independent laboratory testing to meet rigorous criteria for both performance and efficiency.
Faucets
Kitchen and bathroom faucets account for more than 15% of all indoor household water use. This is more than 1 trillion gallons of water across the United States each year. WaterSense-certified faucets and accessories can reduce water flow by 30% or more without sacrificing performance. We could save billions of gallons each year by retrofitting the country’s 222 million sink faucets with models that have earned the WaterSense certification.
Toilets

Caroma dual flush .8 / 1.6 gallon
Accounting for about 30% of total water consumption annually, toilets use more water than any other appliance in the home. Before 1980, toilets used up to 5 gallons per flush. Improvements from that time through 1994 made 3.5 gallons the industry standard. Compare that to WaterSense-certified models of today that use 1.28 gallons per flush or less. By replacing a single 3.5 gallon per flush model toilet with a high-efficiency toilet, your household will save almost 4,000 gallons of water per person every year.
Dr. Anna Marie’s Greenovation of Terra Verde
Posted on: April 28, 20091 comment so far
Join Dr. Anna Marie as she takes her 1970s ranch home kicking and screaming into the 21st Century. She’s not doing an extreme makeover and she’s not doing just a facelift, she’s making her home clean and green. From the windows and doors to the paint on the walls, we have a real home with real solutions. If you’re thinking about greening your home on your own, then don’t miss Dr. Anna Marie’s GIY segments on www.Greenovation.TV. Remember: A green home is a healthy home.
How to Incorporate Green Features into a Remodel Project
Posted on: April 19, 2009No comments yet
Remodeling green doesn’t mean you have to sacrifice style. Green means creating thicker walls to improve insulation, installing double pane windows, using recycled and reclaimed products, recycled glass tile and wood, using water-saving dual flush toilets, bamboo plywood cabinetry, soapstone counters and more.
Aged and Ripened . . . but Still Green: Part II
Posted on: April 14, 20097 comments so far (is that a lot?)
Easy Steps to Saving Hundreds on Your Energy Bills
Part 2 of 3 articles (read Part 1)
Originally published by the Sierra Club Huron Valley Group

Photo of the Grocoffs by Cybelle Codish
Green home renovations are not just a passing phase. According to the USGBC, our homes use 21% of the energy consumed in the U.S., and home energy costs have skyrocketed to an average of $3800 per year. In the near future, all homes will be built green. But, the average age of an American home is now over 30 years. That’s a lot of room for energy efficiency improvements. Every year that energy prices rise, and they certainly will, investments in efficiency get better and better. Greenovations are simply the best way to future-proof your home and make it more comfortable and affordable today.
When renovating our 107-year-old home on Ann Arbor’s historic Old West Side, we divided our process into four parts: 1. Energy (reduction & production) 2. Water efficiency 3. Materials and resources, and 4. Indoor environmental quality. These are not separate categories, but rather integrated parts of the whole which must be considered together. For the biggest bang for the carbon buck, we begin with energy efficiency. Later, in Part 3 of this series, we’ll discuss water, materials and indoor environment.





