This Next Generation House Will Blow Your Mind
A new idea around home construction is being fostered by Sabine H. Schoenberg through her new YouTube channel Sabine's New House. With a focus on smart, healthy, and green home innovations she is setting the stage through this mind blowing next generation home.
Greenwich, CT, September 14, 2016 (Newswire.com) - There are numerous trends and buzzwords around home building today. You may have likely heard about home automation and smart homes. If you are trying to save on your energy bills, you are likely zeroing in on energy efficient products for key home systems. Then there are the eco-friendly, green, and zero-VOC products that are popping up everywhere.
With all of these new innovations hitting the market it is just plain confusing to consumers. Enter a next generation house built in Greenwich, CT. The house is providing clarity by demonstrating achievable value-add upgrades to life’s biggest investment. It’s simply called “The Greenwich House” and is the culmination of a vision around smart, healthy, and green home building from Sabine H. Schoenberg, host of Sabine’sNewHouse.
I feel strongly that our homes can be instruments to improve our health and our lives. I want to show consumers and the industry that we can build better homes, not just trendy homes, but better homes that really have a significant impact on people's health and wellbeing.
Sabine H. Schoenberg, Host of Sabine's New House
“I feel strongly that our homes can be instruments to improve our health and our lives,” says Schoenberg.
Schoenberg sees this as a movement around “the next generation of home building”. She has amassed a significant social following and shares her adventure around the many innovations through her YouTube channel.
“I want to show consumers and the industry that we can build better homes, not just trendy homes, but better homes that really have a significant impact on people’s health and wellbeing,” states Schoenberg.
Schoenberg hosted two industry events at the The Greenwich House, “I see it as an opportunity for trades, builders, architects, interior designers, to really get into the details on some of these proven and available innovations.”
Shelly Kahn, owner of Interstate+Lakeland Lumber Corporation in Greenwich says: “What Sabine has accomplished here is ground-breaking, she’s setting a new standard for home construction and we get to see it first hand right here in Greenwich.”
This House Can Really Set The Mood - The Smart House Mood
Every light, switch, room and window in this house is wired up for some serious tech. Powered by Pyng from Crestron, the homeowner is able to control everything from security, lighting, audio and video, heat and air conditioning, even the window coverings are wired up.
Even with all this built in tech the house is able to expand and evolve as new technologies arrive on the market. “I wanted to make sure that anything was possible in this house,” says Schoenberg. “Behind the walls, pre-installed wiring hits every room, switch, and window to make sure that any future upgrade is easy and effortless.”
Further innovations include a doorbell from Ring. Complete with video feed and dedicated smartphone app, you no longer have to guess who is at the door. Need to communicate with your guest? You can even activate the intercom direct from your phone. When away, the Ring doorbell serves as an extra line of security for the home taking a photo of anyone who rings the doorbell.
A Health Focused House Starts At The Frame
Indoor air-quality is a big concern today. In fact, an EPA study showing indoor air quality is 5 times more polluted than outdoor air has been widely reported. With this in mind, Schoenberg made sure that every product coming into the home was Zero-VOC and devoid of hazardous toxins that often plague homes.
This effort started at the stud walls where TrusJoist engineered lumber from Weyerhaeuser was selected. Not only is this lumber incredibly strong and straight (reducing potential for settling and cracking in the walls), the process to make it minimizes toxic chemicals that can off gas into the home.
The finishes and adhesives used in the home also play an important part. Starting with a zero-VOC floor adhesive from Stauf that also has noise dampening properties, to the zero-VOC floor finish from Rubio Monocoat made from beeswax and linseed oil. “I couldn’t believe that during the finish phase of the floor I was overcome with a smell of flowers, not the headache inducing effects of polyurethane,” remarked Schoenberg.
Even the cabinets in the kitchen and closets were made with zero-VOC non-toxic adhesives. “The kitchen cabinet’s from Häcker are made really well, and since they are from Germany they are held to much stricter health and environmental standards.” added Schoenberg. “I knew these would be a good fit for this smart, healthy, green home.”
It doesn’t stop there. To ensure clean fresh air throughout the home, a Zehnder ERV (energy recovery ventilation) system has been installed. The system brings fresh air into the home and expels stale air.
Eco-Friendly Design Has Its Long-term Rewards
Eco-friendly and green home building encompasses two key elements: energy-efficiency and environmentally sourced materials. The Greenwich House has both of these elements in mind starting deep in the ground.
“Achieving the most energy-efficient house isn’t based on one solution, but a series of material and design choices that combined amount to significant cost savings over time.” remarked Schoenberg.
The home’s heating and air-conditioning system is driven by geothermal wells and heat pumps from Carrier. Because they are able to be located inside, the overall life of these systems is dramatically increased.
The overall energy efficiency of the home is further improved by an air and moisture barrier made by Henry Company called Blueskin. The product has been shown to cut energy loss through the exterior of the home by as much as 40%. Further, windows from Jeld-Wen have a UV coating which reduces heat gain through the homes vast windows. Spray-foam insulation rounds out the overall package and energy efficient appliances from Miele and LED lighting further add to the energy savings in the home.
All put together the house has reduced energy consumption by over 60% compared homes built to conventional building standards. That’s serious cost savings over the life of these products.
But green building doesn’t stop at energy efficiency. Thoughtful consideration was key when selecting building materials for the home. The TrusJoist engineered lumber we mentioned earlier has a much higher utilization of the lumber requiring fewer trees to produce. The wood flooring is from Hull Forest Products, a company that is known for sustaining some of the healthiest forests in New England and carefully harvests timber in a way that enhances the forests they manage.
Other materials used in the finishes from natural stone to ECO countertops from Cosentino, made from 75% recycled material (glass, porcelain, and earthenware) also lend to the eco-friendly aspect of the home.
The Expanding Movement
Schoenberg’s efforts strive to showcase new innovations around smart, healthy, and green home building. No surprise that her audience has grown dramatically since launching just a year ago. Catch two of her new series recently added to her YouTube channel: Smart. Healthy. Green. News from Sabine’s New House brings viewers timely news on products and trends and Ideas for Your Home by Sabine’s New House provides viewers with tips on how to incorporate ideas from the show into their own home build and renovations.
You can find out more at Sabine’s website, www.sabinesnewhouse.com.
Source: Sabine's New House
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Tags: eco-friendly, energy-efficiency, green building, healthy house, home building, home construction, home renovation, sustainable building