Pfaff Builders Builds “Green”
Pfaff Builders offers you the opportunity to build a “green” home
so you can...
- Conserve energy (and reduce energy costs),
- Improve indoor
air quality,
- Reduce your home’s ecological
footprint (impact) on the environment
- Save money
“Green” homes are better-designed homes. They
are energy-efficient, high performance homes. In fact, it’s
cheaper to own the green, better-designed home from the day
you move in. Pfaff
Builders offers the following “green” characteristics
to improve the performance of your home:
- Expanded foam insulation
- Radiant, reflective roofing
- Housewrap to create a tighter
envelope
- Decreased drainage and grading costs due to the maximization
of the homesite’s natural topography
- Tankless water
heaters and geothermal heat pumps
- Air exchangers
All of these features can add up to significantly
lower energy bills.
Pfaff Builders also integrates environmentally-friendly
practices into its building process. Pfaff can recommend
and implement
strategies for sustainable site development, water savings,
energy efficiency, materials selection, and indoor environmental
quality.
Below are some “green” building strategies
to consider in your project.
Home Site and Land Use: The location
of the home and how the land is developed has a significant
environmental, financial,
and social impact.
Landscape Conservation and Storm Water Management: Construction
can disturb the landscape and cause erosion, but several activities
can help protect the landscape:
- Save and reuse all site topsoil.
- Protect trees and other natural
features during construction.
- Chip and reuse site-cleared wood
and brush as mulch.
- Re-plant or donate live trees from the site.
- Plant grass that
requires less water, such as fescue.
Energy Efficiency: Reducing
energy consumption helps protect the environment, but also
saves you money. Some examples include:
- Situate garage between
house and prevailing winter winds
- Install Energy Star windows
- Use Energy Star appliances and
light fixtures
- Install on-demand hot water delivery system or
solar hot water heating supplies
- Install solar tubes or glass
blocks for interior light
Building Materials: Using engineered,
locally-produced, recycled, and/or salvaged materials help
reduce the environmental impact
of construction and can also reduce the homeowner’s costs:
- Use
salvaged or regionally produced (within 500 miles) masonry
and stone
- Use reusable foundation forms, such as metal instead
of wood
- Use wood from sustainably-managed forests
- Use natural insulation
(cotton, bio-based foam)
- Use recycled roofing material
- Use interior bamboo flooring
Indoor Air Quality: Indoor air
quality has a huge impact on health. Building materials, such
as paints and binders, often
release fumes, triggering asthma, allergies, or other reactions.
To improve air quality:
- Use non-toxic cleaners
- Ventilate the building after each finish
application
- Use water-based paints and finishes or low VOC (volatile
organic compounds) paints and finishes on walls, floors,
and other
interior surfaces
- Install a de-humidification system for the
entire house
- Physically separate the garage from the house
Water Conservation
and Plumbing: Reducing water consumption is an important part
of “going green.” To conserve
water:
- Use front loading, horizontal-axis clothes washer
- Use a
composting toilet
- Use only one shower head per shower.
- Use rainwater for watering
lawn and toilet flushing
Waste Recycling,
Reduction, and Disposal: Construction can create a significant
amount of waste. To reduce construction
waste:
- Disassemble existing buildings and reuse or recycle
the building materials
- Obtain products from suppliers that
use packaging that has been recycled or reused
- Recycle cardboard,
wood, metal, brick, block, and other building materials
- Install
recycling and kitchen scrap compost bins
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