Jetson Green reports HGTV has built a LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) Platinum certified modular house, one of only 40 in Colorado, that it plans to give away. The exterior is a combination of brick and thin stone veneers, 50 percent recycled fiber-cement siding, with recycled blown-cellulose. The Andersen windows are 100 series with E4 glass set in reclaimed wood frames. The 2×6 exterior framing is set on 24” centers with three stud corners. This 2,400 square foot HGTV Green Home earned a HERS (Home Energy Rating System) rating of 38, which makes it 62 percent more efficient than a standard new home. The solar photovoltaic system will generate 75 percent of the home’s energy. Other green features include non-VOC (volatile organic compounds) paint, recycled wood fiber floors, and interior doors made of beetle-kill wood, a locally grown pine. The giveaway begins April 14.
1 thought on “HGTV to Give Away Green, LEED Platinum Modular Home”
Grandlakeview
Notice they called the home modular–they are careful not to use the “manufactured” word. It would be wonderful if we could educate HGTV about manufactured homes and get them involved in manufactured housing.–they certainly could help improve our image and may be able to add value in the way which our homes are built or designed. There is a great need for AFFORDABLE housing that is NOT SUBSIDIZED housing. (Apartment buildings built with tax credits and then renting subsidized units are not affordable to the taxpayers that must subsidize them for the rest of time).
Notice they called the home modular–they are careful not to use the “manufactured” word. It would be wonderful if we could educate HGTV about manufactured homes and get them involved in manufactured housing.–they certainly could help improve our image and may be able to add value in the way which our homes are built or designed. There is a great need for AFFORDABLE housing that is NOT SUBSIDIZED housing. (Apartment buildings built with tax credits and then renting subsidized units are not affordable to the taxpayers that must subsidize them for the rest of time).