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A Response About Green Renovation

greenansw-atla_012908.jpgYesterday's house tour post of the Santa Monica apartment renovation brought up a lot of questions amongst readers of what exactly made the renovation "green"...and even a debate/discussion about the definition of green renovation itself, including whether city living is an environmental choice or not. Lori Dennis, ASID, LEED AP of Dennis Design Group was kind enough to send us a detailed response to some of the questions and criticisms...

Why is this apartment green?

First thing to understand is that living in a large multi family structure is always more ecofriendly than one family per structure. Occupants share floor, ceiling and wall space as well as HVAC systems and the energy used to build and maintain the structure. Having hundreds of people use one pool, tennis court, driveway, pavement, common areas and underground parking not only saves energy and resources but occupies much less surface area. Have you heard of storm water runoff? Heat Island effect? Non permeable surfaces? A great solution to these problems is multi family structures. The apartment is also walking distance to pretty much everything the tenant does during the day; work, yoga, farmers market, library, etc. The building is walking distance to buslines and has bicycle storage and showers for the tenants. Because of it's location by the beach in Santa Monica, the climate is rarely so cold or so hot that heating or cooling are neccesary. The tenant does his best to bundle up in the winter if catches a chill. I've been around in summer, the windows are always open. He also happens to be a vegan who is very respectful of the planet. He does own a car and does have to drive it on rare occasion, but he has offset his carbon footprint by purchasing a large amount of rain forest property in Costa Rica that he says he will never develop.

Second thing to think about in our green apartment are the methods and materials we used in redecorating. We reused the sofa and patio chairs (adding slipcovers and pillows in organic cotton fabric), dining table and both mirrors (added fabric to the frame of the living room mirror). The remaining furniture in the apartment: bed, dining chairs, bookcases, desk and coffee table were given to his very good and extremely happy friend. We selected FSC (sustainably harvested) wood veneers for the new furniture and used Safecoat AFM eco friendly stain on the coffee table. The apartment was painted in Benjamin Moore EcoSpec low VOC paint. We purchased the chandelier used (keeping it out of a landfill) and updated with organic cotten fabric on the shades. Every light fixture contains flourescent bulbs. The linens he purchased were from Anna Sova, all organic material and manufacturing, plus some of the proceeds go to sustainable farmers throughout the world. We gave the old linens to charity. The new mattress is from H3 Environmental ( Read up on owner Mary Cordaro's green initiatives, she's a 30 year vet in the industry.) Only certified organic cleaners are used in this apartment. All appliances are Energy Star rated (required by the building) and shower heads, faucets and toilets are low flow (encouraged by the city of Santa Monica).

Thanks,
Lori

Comments (2)

I think that this a great way to showcase the variety of green materials that are available for purchase, there is no doubt that they will be become an increasingly popular choice when it comes to building, decorating and renovating. Some of them, like energy star rated appliances, low flow toilets and cfls are close to becoming pretty standard choices but as long as they are considered green it doesn't hurt to keep listing them as selling points.


I was wondering what the countertops and cabinet materials are. I'm assuming these are green materials also. And the floors too.

While a Southern California high rise may not have to be too concerned about heating and cooling, for places like Chicago, heating and cooling a multi-unit structure is a big deal. We need to heat parking garages, heat and cool thousands of floors of common space, we need to chill millions of gallons of water for air conditioning.

I think we are headed in the right direction though in some of our cities. Green roofs, cisterns, solar panels. We definitely need to take a holistic approach to greening our multi-unit structures. It's kind of like the individual apartment is just a cell and the building and its mechanicals is the body with all of the vital organs. As a multi-unit dweller I hope that one day it is just as easy to live off of the grid than it is for a single family dweller.

posted by art on 2008-01-29 19:23:39
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Hi, the link in the first line, "house tour post," doesn't work.

posted by brooklino on 2008-01-29 21:10:26
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