8.28.2012

Cabinet Plywood

Upside down photo of the plywood used for our cabinets
 
The plywood we required our cabinet makers to use is formaldehyde-free. This allowed us to achieve half a point under the Materials and Resources category (using an Environmentally Preferred Product, or EPP) and also assured compliance with the EPA's Indoor airPLUS.

8.17.2012

Doors, Baseboards, and Trim

Our interior doors, waiting to be hung
 
Since we are painting (rather than staining) our baseboards and trim, we elected to go with a very basic paint-grade, finger-jointed board. Finger-jointed wood is an Environmentally Preferred Product (EPP) because scraps that would otherwise have been discarded are knitted together to make long, lovely, perfectly acceptable pieces of wood trim. Our interior doors are solid core with a wood veneer, all formaldehyde free.

8.03.2012

Metal Roof

Archzilla!
 
Extruder - elevated up to the carport roof, in action 

Coil of metal roofing material, in Bright White
 
The Archzilla pulled up to the house today with  several giant coils of bright white metal roofing (SRI of over 90) and a mobile extruder to deliver our standing-seam metal roof panels. Selecting a metal roof was part of our Durability Plan (credits ID 2.1 Durability Planning and ID 2.2 Durability Management), and the choice of color - with its high SRI - contributes greatly to our energy performance (EA 1.1 Performance of ENERGY STAR for Homes and EA 1.2 Exceptional Energy Performance) and hopefully helps to lower our utility bills over the life of the home.

7.23.2012

Wood Flooring


Reclaimed wood flooring from Mrs. Grovewood's grandparents' house

7.13.2012

Construction Waste

 Pile of debris from construction - awaiting removal to <sigh> a landfill
 
Waste management has been difficult on our project, both because of a fairly tight site (we don't have  a lot of space that isn't being built on or needed to access other parts of the property for construction) and because of standard operating procedure in the residential construction industry.
 
We initially targeted points for credit MR 3.2 Construction Waste Reduction hoping we could recycle or otherwise divert wood, cardboard, and other construction waste, however our investigation of the local options (MR 3.1 Construction Waste Management Planning) revealed that the smallest recycling dumpster available for residential projects is 20' long. This doesn't sound like much, but on a 1/5 acre site with trees and where a one-story house is being built, there are many places a container that large will fit. In addition, for construction of a single family home, it takes a while to fill that thing up. So here's my plea to local waste management companies: offer smaller recycling containers for residential construction!
 
So the alternative to diverting waste is attempting to minimize it. The point thresholds under MR 3.2 Option A are pretty stringent, and even with proper planning and take offs, most subcontractors (in our area, anyway) are used to approaching their trade a certain way - often one that both presumes and results in a lot of rework and repair and therefore generates waste. We are on track to get no points for the MR 3.2 credit and have been for awhile now.

6.24.2012

Brick House: Mighty Mighty

Brick going up over rigid foam insulation
 
Our building envelope is getting its outer coat - the brick. The brick was manufactured within 500 miles of our house (plants in central Texas and southwest Arkansas.) The overall wall assembly is OSB sheathing against the studs, with house-wrap, 1/2" rigid foam insulation board, an air gap, and the brick veneer. With the interior CelBar insulation, we have a very good R-value for improved energy efficiency.

6.21.2012

Drywall

Hypo-allergenic joint compound

Drywall hung and being taped and floated