Putting Properties in Their Place

Location, location, location: The old saying about what’s most important in  real estate has never held truer than in today’s tough market. Residential property spending has been dropping for months (the average U.S. home sales price dropped from $322,100 in the first quarter to $310,000 in the second quarter of 2007, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.). New properties have stalled on the market, causing many developers to postpone or cancel upcoming developments. But some residential projects are selling — well — and location plays a big part in their success. The Big Apple Goes Crazy for the Great Outdoors…

Online Property Adventures

I had dinner the other night with my Realtor — who expressed a strong dislike for a number of sell-it-yourself Web sites (and also gave me all the neighborhood gossip). Which got me thinking — of all the real estate Web sites, which measure up? Newsweek recently had an interesting breakdown. Check it out for comparisons.

The Residential Ripple Effect

The U.S. housing slump has had an obvious effect on residential construction-related industries. Just ask Home Depot, Sears or paint maker Sherwin-Williams — they’ve all seen stock and/or profit decline this year due to it. Rising home values increased personal wealth in recent years — and now, some analysts worry a further decline in home prices will kill consumer spending and push the U.S. into a recession, according to David C. Wheelock, an economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. The residential market has long been considered to have a key influence on the economy, and as it…

A+ In Green Learning

Yesterday’s Out and About blog touched on why universities are embracing green building. They aren’t the only ones. For some of the same — and other unique — reasons, many public grade schools throughout the country are also incorporating sustainability into their new construction plans. Thus far, roughly 60 U.S. schools have been certified by the U.S. Green Building Council. Another 370 are on the way. The USGBC has also launched the "Green Schools Advocate" Program, which will train volunteers to urge state education and local school boards to make schools green. As more U.S. cities and states encourage sustainability…

College Life Involves More Green Principles; Yet Still, Many Naps

August means back-to-school time for thousands of college students across the country — but they aren’t the only ones hitting campus this fall. Green design has made its way into college life, and green university dorms and buildings may be becoming one of the fastest growing sustainable building sectors. Already: More than 300 schools are Green Building Council members, according to the Houston Chronicle. As of April, more than 30 LEED registered campus projects were underway, according to Green Building Council data. And with good reason: Wisely, the USGBC for years has actively recruited student involvement. In 2002, it founded…

Once Upon a Green Time

Energy costs were always my mother’s main concern about owning a castle. Not that my family ever really considered moving into one. Nevertheless, when reading stories to my sister and I about knights, damsels — and everything that threatens knights and damsels — she would always pause mid fairy tale and say, "Can you imagine how much it would cost to heat that thing?" It added a somewhat practical element to bedtime story hour: But the woman had a point. Castles are drafty, and big. Yet amazingly, my mother apparently was not the only one concerned with royal power costs….

Home Sweet Dirt and Straw Home

We all know what people in glass houses shouldn’t throw — stones. (Actually, it’s probably not a good idea to throw anything if you live in an all-glass house.) But what should people who live in straw houses abstain from doing? Absolutely nothing, according to a new green building trend that is encouraging use of materials like straw, compressed dirt/rammed earth, an adobe straw mixture and aerated concrete blocks. (Lists of such materials can be found here, along with straw construction information.) Builders had in the past shied away from such materials because of fears they were highly flammable, not…

Knowing the Cost and Effect of Green Building is Key

News last week that a recent study by the World Business Council for Sustainable Development (WBCSD) had found the industry perception of green building’s costs and benefits was way off base was disheartening news to green enthusiasts. The survey found that real estate and construction industry officials often misjudge the costs and benefits of building green. Their general estimations of what green building added to a project budget hovered around 17 percent (the true cost is just 5 percent); industry members also thought greenhouse gas emissions from construction were 19 percent of the world’s total when they truly are 40…

The First Rule About Green Building is that We Always Talk About Green Building

BRAD PITT IS IN NEW ORLEANS! BRAD PITT IS IN NEW ORLEANS! OMG! BRAD!!! PITT!!! NEW! ORLEANS!!!!!! Such was the breathless, teenage girl-cadenced cry of the tabloids this week, as the Bran half of Brangelina rolled down south into the Big Easy. Numerous media outlets — from People to the Associated Press — covered the trip, publishing articles and photos of the "Fight Club" and Oceans Thirteen" star in New Orleans. Was he partying in the French Quarter? Hanging out in the home he owns there? Reading Anne Rice books? Nope. Pitt was in New Orleans on Tuesday touring a…

Habitat for Humanity, Indeed

An interesting program designed by the Oak Ridge National Laboratory — inspired by the goal of reaching zero energy, where a home would produce what it uses — has outfitted five Habitat for Humanity homes in Tennessee with new renewable energy producing and energy-efficient technologies. The homes, RenewableEnergyAccess.com reports, feature solar panels, geothermal heat pumps, heat pump water heaters, airtight walls and roofing panels and mechanical ventilation systems. They are co-funded by the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) and the Tennessee Valley Authority. Jeff Christian, a buildings technology researcher at Oak Ridge National Laboratory and coordinator of the Habitat for…