Drilling through the foundation, just this once

Unfortunately, the refrigeration tubing along with its thick insulation won’t fit through the 2-inch conduits that are neatly buried under the foundation to emerge inside. The work-around is to punch two 4-inch PVC conduits through the the North wall below grade. And to seal them thoroughly. The tubing to the mini splits will run through the fatter conduits.

With Natalie Pace of Huffington Post

Huffington Post blogger Natalie Pace visited the house on Saturday, pictured above with friend Jim and architect Dennis Wedlick. Natalie blogs about clean energy. When it comes to energy use, a Passive House is the best building standard in the world. We’ll be certified as using about 90 percent less energy than a conventionally constructed equivalent (no need to import foreign oil to heat our house). The site itself is part of the energy story, too. In the mid-1970s, utility companies proposed building a nuclear power plant here, envisioning a cooling tower where this energy-efficient home now stands — on land farmed by Susan’s family at least eight generations.

Wise use of natural resources adds another green dimension because every inch of glass and insulation is calculated to contribute to the high performance of this “machine for living”, in the words of Le Corbusier. More familiar green choices may be our use of sustainably-produced wood products, zero VOC interior paint, and a recycled staircase and cabinets. We’re also buying local when possible and leaving the lower level’s concrete walls and floor unfinished.

Talking to reporters (three so far) is a new and somewhat unnerving experience. This time, listening to Dennis describe how a Passive House works made the 90 minutes fly thanks to his enthusiasm, artistry and technical know-how. It was pleasure meeting Natalie and Jim and we’re excited to see what comes of the visit via Huffington.

Natalie’s bio: Natalie Pace is the author of You Vs. Wall Street and founder and CEO of the Women’s Investment Network, LLC, at NataliePace.com. She is a repeat guest on CNBC, ABC, Fox News, Forbes.com, NPR and more.

Happy Anniversary

In our old house, a framed wedding invitation hung on the wall. Maybe I would have gotten the date right if it still did. Like almost everything else we own, it has been in storage for a year and a half. Our wedding anniversary was September 26th. Chris looked puzzled when I insisted it was today, the 28th. My mother had the proof on her piano, amid the family photos. Above is the scanned evidence.

 

Clapboard

The black cube is being transformed with clapboard pre-painted to match the historic round barn and dwellings at nearby Hancock Shaker Village. Seeing this today made Susan suddenly nostalgic for the 1880s house we owned in Rhinecliff for 10 years. SIPs and glu-lams are very cool but there’s something about siding: This house is starting to look like home.