The Green house of the Future in the Wall Street Journal

Mc Donough
The Wall Street Journal asked four architects to:
design an energy-efficient, environmentally sustainable house without regard to cost, technology, aesthetics or the way we are used to living. The idea was not to dream up anything impossible or unlikely — in other words, no antigravity living rooms. Instead, we asked the architects to think of what technology might make possible in the next few decades. They in turn asked us to rethink the way we live.
The results are fascinating. Where some might say that the green gizmo-covered single family house in Greenwich is over, this is the Wall Street Journal, and hey, they all have their old salaries back, the boys are back in town, so whatever, there’s no need to really rethink the way we live.
William McDonough + Partners envisions its house like a tree. The “bark” of the house is made up of thin, insulating films that would self-clean and self-heal if damaged. A curved roof with large eaves provides shade, which lowers the heat load in summer. The “trunk,” or the frame of the home, consists of carbon tubes, while the “roots” are a heat-pump system buried in the yard.

Cook + Fox's
Cook + Fox’s house reacts to the weather, turning dark in the bright sun to insulate the house from heat and turning clear on dark days to absorb light and heat. The façade also captures rain and condensation to fill the household’s water needs. Inside, walls and furniture are on rollers to take advantage of the fact that some spaces, such as bedrooms, are underutilized most of the day.

Rios Clementi Hale Studios
The Rios Clementi Hale Studios house has a garden façade that includes chickpeas, tomatoes and other plants. The plants also provide shade and cooling. A rooftop reservoir collects water and keeps the building cool, while rooftop windmills generate energy.

Mouzon Design
The Mouzon Design house uses tomorrow’s technologies — as well as ancient techniques to reduce energy use. Solar paneling built into the roof and façade provides electricity and hot water. The house also employs a “breeze chimney,” an ancient architectural tool, as a kind of air conditioning.

Mouzon's Breeze Chinmey
I have become a real fan of Steve Mouzon, as I become disillusioned with the idea that we can throw a lot of expensive heat pumps and photovoltaics on top of what we have always done and call it sustainable. He usually tries to use traditional techniques to capture wind and sun, but uses the Wall Street Journal exercise to go a bit overboard:
The top element of the Tower of Wind & Water is a wind generator that produces electricity. Nobody makes this exact shape of wind generator yet… many of the current generation of generators look as if they were engineered but not designed, leaving them inherently unlovable. This one, on the other hand, does its best to be beautiful while it is generating your electricity.
More in the Wall Street Journal
I like the attempt to peek around the corner into the future.
But don’t wait! Some of this technology is ready today. And you can use it with great results in more conventional looking homes. For example, solar hot water (the U.S. is behind in this simple, smart technology). Solar hot water is quite affordable and depending on several variables can pay for itself in 5-7 years. It works in sunny climates–and it works in cloudy climates. It’s a great entree into renewables. See a basic description of the system we use at http://greenhomesamerica.wordpress.com/2008/09/12/shedding-light-on-solar-hot-water/
Thanks,
Mike