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Category Archives: Green Home

AIP Tech: Smart Home Exhibit in Chicago

A fully-functioning, smart home exhibit has opened on the grounds of Chicago’s Museum of Science and Industry. The home reflects “the lifestyleSmart Home Green + Wired Exhibit of a couple  looking to minimize home maintenance, maximize efficiency and settle in to a space that not only is beautiful, but functional.”

The three-story pre-fab, modular home features innovative home technologies, products, furniture and has a Smart Home Park offering techniques for urban gardening. Modular homes can be fully customized,  are factory built and can be completed much sooner than a traditional build.

Michelle Kauffman, architect, incorporated five key eco-principles into her design:

  • Smart Design: full-home automation, high ceilings, abundant light
  • Material Efficiency: Renewable/recyclable materials, modular
  • Energy Efficiency: green roof, solar panels, wind turbine
  • Water Efficiency: low-flow shower heads, dual-flush toilets, use of gray water
  • Healthy Environment: non-toxic materials, no or low-volatile organic compounds, water recycling, permeable paving materials

The Exhibit runs through January 9, 2011.

Universal Design & Lifespan Design Allow For People’s Changing Needs Over Time

Owner, Architect Emory Baldwin had several objectives in mind when designing his family home in Seattle, Washington:The Baldwin House demonstrates the principles of Universal Design, Lifespan Design and flexibility.

  • Demonstrate the Principles of Universal Design, lifespan design and flexibility that allows for the changing needs of people over time.
  • Show that these principles could be implemented economically and aesthetically.
  • Assure a typical contractor could easily build this type of house.

The home is designed to promote aging-in-place and is an urban response to the otherwise suburban ranch-style house. Located in an “urban infill” project in the Green Lake neighborhood of Seattle, Washington, it is a three-story house including the finished basement. Both the main floor and the finished basement (which is designed as a mother-in-law apartment) are accessible. (The main floor is accessible from the front sidewalk, while the basement is accessible from the rear alley.)

All doors throughout the house are wide (3′-0″) for enhanced maneuverability, and the house has many universally designed features throughout, including level thresholds at all exterior doors, and curb-less showers. All bathrooms in the house have base cabinets on casters that roll away when not needed. This allows accessibility for people in a seated position.

Three stacking closets are framed, sized and wired for a future elevator so that the house can accommodate the resident’s changing needs and abilities down the road. The upper level of the stacking closets is currently used as a “reading nook” for bedtime stories. A large vertical open space connects the dining room of the main floor with the bridge of the upper floor. The bridge, in turn, connects the master suite with the children’s bedroom area.

Flexible spaces were created to handle the changing needs of the family over time. For example, the basement is designed to be a comfortable mother-in-law apartment. However, it is currently used as a large home office and exercise room. The structure of the open space is designed to accommodate another room, if it is ever needed in the future. The room adjacent to the kitchen is currently a play area, but in the future it can be used as a family, music, or dining room.

Click here to see the Baldwin House Showcase:more pictures and video.


Updated: Revised Links

Low Cost, Low Tech FIRST, Please, Mr. Obama

By Louis Tenenbaum

Louis Tenenbaum: Certified Age in Place SpecialistAs a carpenter and a long time advocate of simpler I generally check for the low tech solution first. Sometimes a nail or screwdriver is plenty. A nail gun or a power drill/driver is not needed. The tools costs less, the fastener costs less and the time to do it, the effort expended is much less (by the time you get it out, plug it in and put it away). A way to discuss this is Appropriate Technology. My example: When you need to haul lumber a pickup truck works. When you go out with friends a sedan works. The right tool for the job.

The obvious example for Aging in Place are well placed grab bars and grips. These simple, inexpensive technologies save broken hips (money & misery) at lower cost than high tech monitoring. That makes them a great investment. Capital and effort used very well.

Two further examples for Aging in Place:
1. Design Modifications support independence and provide ergonomic caregiver environments. This reduces the injury risk for residents and scarce caregiver resources (both paid and family/informal). Reduced injuries saves medical dollars and misery. That is good value for our effort and investment.
2. Self care and self management are current words for behavior interventions. Some see it as an update to old fashioned self -reliance. This is enlightened use of our resources. It requires the best of social marketing. The cost is low. The reward is high.

Master Spa Bath for the Baby Boomer and Beyond

By Gunnar Baldwin and Lenora Campos, Ph.D.

Remodeling the bathroom is a good starting place to make a home more sustainable for aging in place. AARP research shows that more than half (52%) of American homeowners age 45 and older are interested in remaining in their homes as they get older. Green remodeling reduces monthly utility bills while universal design elements increase comfort and improve lifestyle, and all people — no matter their age — appreciate additional comfort and safety. Today, advances in technology make it possible to improve both convenience and performance.

Master Spa Bath

Additional features that are popular for the enlarged spa master bath:

  • Exercise equipment such as stationary bicycle, and treadmill;
  • Separate tub with features such as warm air injected through tubing that creates a massage and aroma therapy experience accompanied by music systems integrated into the tub itself and chromatherapy lights to induce that relaxed mood;
  • A separate shower without entry barriers in case the homeowners ever need to wheel in. One way to achieve this is to have the floor gently slope toward a perimeter drain at the far side.
age in place at home - it's where you want to be.