Monday, March 22, 2010

The End

OK, so this is a little out of order, but things have been a wee bit chaotic around here, and probably will be for the foreseeable future.

Here's a pic of Bob and his able assistant putting the finishing touches on the north window.

From House

And here's what we have been anticipating for 8 months--
From House

Many thanks to those of you who have followed along on this project. Words can not express how appreciative we are at your participation. When we look at the house now, it is filled with ideas, suggestions, considerations and participation from a wide variety of family members and friends. You helped in significant ways, weighing in on stain choice, window placement, and even room additions. So the house is in a very real sense, a group effort, not only from the craftsmen who designed and built it, but from you and your feedback. And the house reflects the personality of all of us.

And that makes us feel real good.

This will be the last entry to Houthpith.

If you would like to visit it sometime in the future to regale in the insouciance, you either (1) are desparate for entertainment, or (2) are aware that the web address will be changed to:

http://www.houthpith.blogspot.com

And finally this. If you wish to continue keeping up with whatever it is that goes on around here, check in at

http://www.northpith.blogspot.com

ARAMIS IS COMING!

Thursday, March 18, 2010

Numbers guys

Big day today--the final evaluation of exactly how tight this house is.


Rich Urban from Focus on Energy conducts the blower door test which sucks air out of the house and checks the amount that the house will 'allow' to blow out. Clear as mud?
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Here Charlie videotapes the mud.
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And here's what the numbers say. The average new home has a relative number of 100. Charlie's best home until today, had a number of 56, which means that it was 44% more efficient than the average new home. Our house is 44.4, 12% more efficient than Charlie's best to date.

That was somewhat predicted. But here are the numbers that make more sense to me.

Predicted cost to heat the water for heat and domestic hot water? $513 (PER YEAR! Take that Wisconsin Public Service). However, even with that we will emit, get this, 10.6 tons of carbon dioxide, 57.2 pounds of sulfur dioxide, and 29.1 somethings (I can't read my notes) of nitrous oxide.

Since these are only expected and do contain some variables, we will report a year's worth of data to Rich to determine how close they came--the therms, not the nitrous oxide, whatever that is.

Monday, March 8, 2010

If the Doorbell is On . . .

. . . we must be getting close.

In fact the place was crowded again today with Bob the Builder and Brian the Electrician here. But the fireplace guys installed the gas stove so their truck and trailer were there,

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and Alanna and her sister, Lisa were doing cleanup duty.

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Alanna determines which end is the business end of the vacuum.

Brian is nearing the finish line as well with almost all the exterior lights up and running.
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I almost forgot! There was one more visitor today--the building inspector. And we can move in!!!!!! Ann took a shower tonight while I gawked around. We'll move the bed in tomorrow (somehow) and the rest of the stuff over time.

And finally, the doorbell is in.

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Tuesday, March 2, 2010

Let the Finishing Begin

The only thing left in the bath is the mirror above the sink.

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Monday, March 1, 2010

Comment from someone we know

The comment section of the recent article in the Rhinelander Daily News holds this gem:

" Most interesting article. It appears that the Eshelman's have done a great job in building a true energy efficient home that compliments the natural surroundings they live in. We are LUCKY (emphasis added) to have conscientious energy minded home builders such as Scott and Ann. "

Saturday, February 27, 2010

I Love Newspapers!

The Web edition of the Rhinelander Daily News has an article about the house. It's a very well written piece and captures the local flavor of the building.

But, if you click on the link above, at least this weekend, you will see another headline next to a picture of the house. The headline reads, "Adult Gift Store May be On Way."

The full article here:

Sustainable home balances life with nature

By Sarah Juon
Daily News Correspondent

Anyone in a position to remodel or build a new home can assume that energy costs will be going up, not down.

When Scott and Ann Eshelman decided it was time to remodel their home — built by Ann’s parents Paul and Marian Munninghoff in the 1950s from wood recycled from an earlier home on the premises — they asked Rich Urban, a Rhinelander-based consultant with Wisconsin’s Focus on Energy program, to do an assessment. They wanted his advice on how to remodel for energy efficiency.

“When I looked at their house I found a lot of issues,” Urban says. “It was very drafty. I wrote up a detailed report for them, outlining all my recommendations for making it tighter. But I questioned whether it would be worthwhile to go to all the expense of fixing it up.”

The contractor for the remodeling job, Charlie Sauter of Sauter Builders in Boulder Junction, had questions too.

As Ann puts it, “Charlie told us that Rich’s recommendations may be just the tip of the iceberg, that once we started opening walls, we’d find more things we needed to do. He cautioned that a home is only as good as its weakest link when remodeling. In the end, we’d just have a fixed-up old house.”

After weighing the pros and cons, the Eshelmans decided to take a hammer to the old house and build a new one on the same footprint.

While Urban’s report on the old house had to be scrapped, Sauter points out that his expertise became invaluable. “It’s great for me to have someone like Rich to qualify a house for the Energy Star program before the house is built or even designed,” he says.

“We provide one kind of house, the ‘envelope’ for an energy-efficient home,” Sauter continues, “but there are a lot of other choices that drive what the final product will be. Because of Rich’s help – and because Scott and Ann ‘walked the talk,’ putting their money in areas that will make a huge difference in energy savings in years to come — their house turned out to be one of the easiest we have built.”

Designs for the new home began last June and construction started at the end of July. Finishing touches are underway, and in March the Eshelmans will move in.

The home’s exterior, finished in natural materials of harmonious earth tones, evokes Frank Lloyd Wright’s elegant wood-and-glass structures in the way it blends into the wooded hillside.

The house appears more modest than its 3,000 square feet would suggest. It is slightly smaller than its predecessor and one-tenth as leaky, as measured by CFM (cubic feet per minute) air exchange rate.

“This is a super-tight house,” Sauter says, “with only .03 air changes per hour, compared to three times that much in a conventionally-constructed house. Yet it’s very healthy air because of these little ducts all around which mechanically vent the air, bringing between 70 to 80 percent of the energy lost back into the house.”

To qualify for the monetary incentives provided by the Wisconsin Energy Star program, a house must have a Home Energy Rating System score of 80 or lower, Urban explained. A conventional house built to Wisconsin construction code — the minimum standard a contractor can build — is assigned the score of 100.

The Eshelman home has an energy rating score of 48.

“This house is 52 percent more energy-efficient than conventional construction standards,” Urban notes.

Several choices were made by the homeowners that led to this outcome, Sauter said.

Structured plumbing

Sauter drew upon today’s most efficient technology for heating a home by installing an in-floor thermal radiant heating system. In addition, he installed “structured plumbing,” a technology that reduces the amount of water wasted.

“This is an insulated trunk line that works as an extension of the hot water heater,” Sauter explains. “In the morning, when you want to use hot water, you press a button that activates this line. When you turn on the water, about one cup comes out cold, that’s all. Then it’s hot.”

Urban observes that this is the first home he’s seen with structured plumbing.

“This is a homeowner pleaser,” he says. “Think about how in the shower you wait and wait for the hot water to come. No more wasting all that water.”

Windows

Sauter said the homeowners wanted lots of windows, so the design took this into account by orienting the home southward and installing windows and glazing that would provide passive solar heating.

High-performance windows are pricey, but by using Urban’s Energy Star software program, Sauter was able to do a cost-benefit analysis.

“It’s a powerful tool when you’re planning, because you can change the in-puts,” he says. “We were able to quantify the bang for the buck. No one has limitless funds, so this is important. Scott and Ann had been using propane gas for heating. They decided to run in a line for gas, and that enabled them to save enough money to spring for the high-performance Semco windows.”

Solar energy

After design, the most significant for energy savings, Sauter says, is the solar thermal component.

“Solar thermal can reduce the heat-load for heating both hot water and space,” he says.

Marc DeBrock, owner of the Rhinelander-based MMK Solar Thermal company, installed the solar thermal system.

“We didn’t have a lot of space to work with, and we wanted it to look good aesthetically,” DeBrock says. “Instead of using the normal 4x8-ft. or 4x10-ft. panels, we chose eight 4x4-ft. panels to stretch across the roof’s ridge line. And we installed a small photovoltaic panel on the end to use sun energy to turn on the pump that runs the fluid through the panels.”

DeBrock notes that the house’s south-southwest orientation helped. “This is a hard location for solar panels because of all the trees, but the orientation made it work perfectly.”

Solar energy is conducted through a heat exchanger to a 270-gallon tank in the basement. The tank is filled by well water that enters the house at 50 degrees. Once solar energy heats the tank water to a certain level, it can send its hot water to the hot water heater and to the in-floor radiant system.

“Solar thermal is always an add-on,” DeBrock explains. “If the solar thermal system produces enough heat to take care of 100 percent of your load on certain days, that’s great, but you always will need your other appliances – your hot water heater and your in-floor thermal system.

“By using the solar thermal system,” he continues, “you try to displace as much energy as possible — in this case the natural gas. If there’s plenty of sun out there, the hot water heater will never kick on. If it’s cloudier or colder and the tank only heats up to 100 degrees, it still goes to the hot water heater, but the heater will only have to make up the difference between 100 degrees and about 135 degrees, so you’re still saving on fuel.”

DeBrock says the system will take care of 70 percent of the hot water needs and 15 to 20 percent of space heating needs.

The 128-sq.-ft. solar panel system and all its accessories costs about $16,000, which may seem high, but over the life of the panels and tank, “an owner will see anywhere from a 7 to 15 percent return on investment,” he says. “Typically, these systems last 30 to 40 years. With a conventional furnace, you’re looking at replacing it in 10 to 20 years and meanwhile have all the cost of fuel.”

DeBrock notes there are a number of state and federal grants available that pay up to half or more of the cost of installing a renewable energy system. Focus on Energy is one such program, and a federal program currently gives a 30 percent tax credit on renewable energy systems.

Sustainability in

the details

Two other subcontractors provided valuable components to making the house eco-friendly, Scott notes.

Timothy Tripp of Marshfield, owner of T2 Techniques, constructed interior walls of earth clay, a surface that “breathes,” Scott says. “It self-adjusts to the humidity in the room – if there’s too much, it absorbs it; too little, and it releases it. It’s a natural material that requires no maintenance. It won’t shrink or crack. Think of a clay pot before it goes into the kiln. If there’s a dent, you just apply a little water and smooth it out.”

The walls are covered in a natural, soy-based paint, Scott points out. “We chose an acacia color, to capture the look of wild rice on the river in August.”

The floors are Brazilian hardwood, FSC (Forest Stewardship Council) certified, guaranteeing the wood comes from forests that are sustainably managed.

One of the most unique features of the house resides in the bathroom: a molded concrete counter designed by Rich McAllister of Tomahawk, owner of Custom Concrete Innovations. The counter, custom-designed for the space, adds the artistic flourish of a curved broken-stone edge.

“This is solid, high-performance counter, not to be compared with the kind of concrete you see in a sidewalk,” McAllister explains. “I started my business in 2006 after falling in love with the look and versatility of concrete. You can do just about any kind of look with it. This counter is stained to give it an old-world look. I use diamond polishing equipment that allows me to give any surface up to a 3,000-level polish — a very high shine. This one is finished at about 800.”

About 50 percent of the counter consists of recycled glass produced by Glass Plus, another Tomahawk company. “The counter also uses CSA — calcium sulfate aluminate – as the glue factor,” McAllister says.

“CSA is very eco-friendly,” he says. “Ordinary Portland Cement is fired at 2,700 degrees to create the clinker, or the big ball, which you grind up. The ball comes out really hard. When you use CSA, you fire at only 2,000 degrees and you produce a softer, cleaner clinker. The grinding takes much less energy, amounting to a 62-percent savings in CO2 greenhouse emissions.”

‘Green’ vs. Sustainable

Charlie Sauter bristles at the word “green.”

“This has become a hot-button word for me,” he says. “It’s become a ploy, used by advertising to sell boutique, expensive up-end products. I prefer the word sustainable, because it implies a long-term relationship with the product. Sustainability is about how a homeowner can make decisions based on using less energy and recycling resources, like water.”

Sauter says it’s a misconception that a house constructed for energy efficiency is more expensive.

“A home like Scott’s and Ann’s exemplifies the practical, economical side to sustainability,” Sauter says. “You design a floor plan and you heat the house according to efficiency, and later, down the road, you can always add on things, like solar thermal and photovoltaics. The basics do not have to cost a lot.”

Information about state and federal renewable energyprograms can be found atwww.focusonenergy.com.

Friday, February 26, 2010

Students and Glue

With apologies for the lack of posts, it seems as though the closer we get to moving in, the more there is to do.

On top of that, on Tuesday we hosted a couple of classes from Nicolet Technical College as well as some teachers and administrators who also attended.

Here Charlie dazzles the group with his display of the most minute detail using the most grandiose of hand gestures (or is he reaching for the food?).

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The next day when Ann asked one of her students who attended what he came away with he said, "You're contractor really loves his work!"

Before the session began, Sarah Juon, from the local astonisher, errr, Rhinelander Daily News interviewed the key players in this venture and an article is to appear this weekend.

We'll keep you (ahem) posted here.

Also in the houth newth (that's house news for the unitiated. I gueth it should be altho in the houth newth . . .

Bob put his finishing masterful touches on the stairs.
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The downside of this event is that we can't walk on them for 24 hours because the glue needs to set.
2010 02 26_3850
As a result we must go outside to go downstairs. And the outside slope looks and feels like a candidate for the luge at the next Winter Olympics (Potential theme: Hodags on Ice).

And, oh yes, in solar news, the panels were cranking out 150 degree heat today, another bright sunny beautiful day in the Northwoods. Take THAT power company!

Sunday, February 21, 2010

This is How Tim Does It

t2technolo
Over and over and over and over and . . .

Tubes and Wires and Clay and Stain and Varnish

Quite a weekend of activity here in our little corner of the world.

Tim, from T2 Technologies, was finishing up the erthclay walls.
2010 02 21_3824_edited-1

After claiming victory over staining, I found myself, well, staining.
2010 02 21_3809


And a thermonuclear device was installed in the basement.
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Perhaps some further explanation is in order.

The solar panels on the roof have been waiting for a storage tank to appear and be installed. The stainless steel heat storage tank was manufactured in town, but took just a little longer than expected. But it arrived on Saturday. Here Marc and Jason struggle with the beast, . . .
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. . .get it down to the basement,
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. . .hook all sorts of pipes, and pumps and wires and meters to it with lots of colorful arrows going various directions, . . .
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and pour a glycol mixture into the system . . .
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(at least I hope it's glycol)
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. . . check to see if it sprung any leaks and then check the readout to see what temperature the panels were producing on a late February hazy afternoon.
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90 degrees!

But the real test was going to be today (Sunday) when the stainless steel tank will be filled with water (which retains the heat).

So this morning I got there a little early to do some staining (did I mention that I have been doing some staining and varnishing?) I just can't live without it.

And at about 9:30 the sun was just peeking over the nearby treetops despite the fact that it had been up since about 6:30.
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And the westernmost panels were just thawing out,
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And by the time we returned (30 minutes later), the temperature gauge read
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about 110!!!!!! Marc stopped his pacing and, like a new father, breathed a sigh of relief.

And then the fun started.
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I don't know all that this little doodad does, but I know that the power is on and the pump is running.

I think the numbers mean the following:
COL is collector, the temperature in the panels; STO is storage, the temperature in the nuclear, errrr stainless steel tank; PKH means Phukat Kim Han, former Cambodian Prime Minister and PKL was the general who overthrew him in a coup between 51.3 and 63.4 years ago.

So now this corner of the basement looks like something out of Willie Wonka.
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All of that learning and attempts at understanding tuckered Emma and me out, so we went out to relax.
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Doesn't Emma look relaxed? I didn't think so either.

Did I mention I was staining?
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Here I examine the intricacies of opening a jar of something or other, maybe aresenic.

And Tim finished the walls and they look mahvelous. We even talked him into putting his initials on the Sisteen Chapel.
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This wall contains the colors of the marsh when the wild rice is ready to pick.
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Did you notice the little hints of autumn near the top? Here's a closer look.
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The color of the wall and its texture change with the light (and with the camera settings).
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And still with the staining.
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Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Light Rail

Each time we visit the house we find something newly completed or something new that we had not noticed before. Today it was both.

We love how the light plays across the walls, highlighting patterns and creating new ones as the sun moves (yes, I know the earth rotates--at least that's what I've been told) and the seasons change.
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And this from the front door.
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To me it sort of looks like those space ships from Close Encounters of the Third Kind.


Well, you may have to use your imagination a little bit.

And squint.

A lot.

Or all of the above.

But on to matters more down to earth.

2010 02 17_3767
Bob is busy making and installing the staircase railing. I must admit that I look at some of the stuff he does and just marvel.

If I would have been responsible for this we either would have the wobbliest hand rail in construction history.

Or I would have driven a spike to the core of the earth in hopes that would hold.

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But the plain fact is that Bob installed these plates on the ledge, used an accompanying tapered screw on the underside of the post and tapped it into place tightening as it goes.

Ingenious!

Friday, February 12, 2010

Highs and Lows

First the highs. Charlie and his family were over at the house late yesterday afternoon. They brought with them their kids, Emma (yes, confusion reigned) and Aaron--both wonderful children. They also brought with them their pet Samoyed, Moishe.

As you can see, Emma (the dog, not the daughter) played big sister to her new white friend . . .

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. . . all the time keeping a watchful eye in case of competitiveness.
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They also brought with them, Jeff Rennicke, an instructor, a writer, and a photographer, all of which he conducts with some fair renown--working for various publications, including Backpacker, and National Geographic Traveler. Some of his work can be seen here and here.

Charlie and Denise are having a television commercial produced promoting their construction business and announcing the opening of their new office in Boulder Junction. And Jef took scads of pictures in and around the house. I caught a glimpse of one of his shots on his viewfinder and I'm now hesitant to post any of my photos here. OK, I'm over that now. But his stuff is really good and I'm so looking forward to seeing the results.

So now the lows. Today was to have been appliance delivery and installation day. And it started out quite well. The guys from Jensen Akins arrived in plenty of time and went about their business methodically and professionally.
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The washer and drier got put in in short order as well as the mini-fridge in the guest room. Then problems arose. It turns out that my special friends from the gas installation (more on that later, much more) did not install a shut off valve on any of the gas lines. To hook up the stove with out a shut off would have been illegal. So it's sort of half sitting as if it's about to be installed but isn't about to be installed.

And the refrigerator is hooked up, but not installed because the opening is too tight. And the microwave came with a dent. Ann tried to talk the guys into leaving it, but they would have none of that and left with it.

In mourning, we drove to Wausau to pick up some light fixtures that Ann had ordered, looked at some cafe tables/pub tables/bistro tables and headed back to our rental disappointed.


Tuesday, February 9, 2010

Big and Little; Walls, Doors and Drawers

Sunday and today the place was humming with activity. Let me restate that. Today the place was humming with activity. Sunday it was yawning with activity for the amateurs were at work. Let me rephrase that. The amateurs were in the house.

And they were putting up knobs and drawer pulls. If you promise not to get out your micrometers, I'll show you a picture of our handiwork. Let me rephrase that. Our accomplishments.

Promise?

OK.

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Here's a pretty boss picture and I think it's OK to take a micrometer to these two.
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But those little swirly lines didn't make it any too easy.

And here's a picture of our cute little dishwasher. In case you're wondering, yes, indeed, we paid extra for 'cute.'

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I must say, though, that it is quite groovy. The front will have a matching cherry face and all the controls are on the top of the drawer itself.

And here are Tim and Jason hard at work on the orange wall.
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Let me rephrase that. Here are Tim and Jason hard at work on the orange wall . . .
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. . . until Charlie walks in the front door.

It's about 6:30 as I write this and Tim is still working feverishly to have the walls dry out. Fans are humming and windows are open, but it will take some time I'm sure.
2010 02 09_3728

2010 02 09_3729

Charlie took a cfm measurement. Someday I'll take that seriously and look up what it means. The short version is this. It's how tight a house is as measured by covering an exterior door and blowing a fan in (or out?) to measure the resistance to air flow. As Emma and I were departing Charlie said they were hoping for over 400.

As soon as I know, you'll know.

I wish I could have stayed, but I had a meeting with the Paper Company. (Details forthcoming at Northpith.)

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