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Green mansions of the millionaires

Eco-friendly dwellings also offer independence for the rich

Some high-end home owners are shifting to innovative energy practices — and not for financial or environmental reasons, Forbes.com's Sara Clemence writes.
By Sara Clemence
updated 5:48 p.m. ET Feb. 11, 2005

These days, it's a lot easier being green.

Solar power is cheaper than ever for homes, American families are using geothermal heating and cooling systems, and efficient wind turbines make it a breeze to generate electricity without using polluting fossil fuels.

Oil prices have slid since last year, but are still high. For example, the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) estimates that nationwide, average natural gas heating costs increased 7 percent from last winter to this winter. The DOE also estimates that nationwide, average heating costs increased 7 percent, which takes into account Arizona, Florida and other states with year-round temperate climates. Meanwhile, state and federal incentives can help home owners install renewable energy sources or implement energy-efficient strategies in their houses.

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But some high-end home owners are shifting to innovative energy practices — and not for financial or environmental reasons.

“Some of our high-end clients literally never see their energy bills,” says Steven J. Strong, founder and president of Solar Design Associates in Harvard, Mass. “They are basically putting a higher value on having more control over their energy destiny. This is a hedge against uncertainty.”

Hollywood, high-tech and high-powered types are getting more energy independent, he says. The 2001 California blackouts, the Northeast blackout of 2003 and the hurricanes that left some Florida residents without power for weeks last summer have encouraged more non-tree-huggers to consider alternative power sources — or going off the grid entirely — for their homes.

Solar Design's projects include a beachfront estate in Martha's Vineyard, a solar power system for the White House and The Solaire, a residential tower in downtown Manhattan that has solar panels built into its skin.

R. James Woolsey, who directed the Central Intelligence Agency from 1993 to 1995, has a photovoltaic system on his home in Maryland.

Then there's Burnt Point, a sprawling estate in the Hamptons that sold in January for $45 million and was featured on the Most Expensive Homes in America beginning in 2001, before being taken off the market in 2004. The 18,000-square-foot house, built by commodities trader David Campbell, features a private dock, a swimming pool and a geothermal cooling system. It's far from the amenity-deprived life once associated with alternative energy.

The decision to install the system at Burnt Point was “more aesthetic than environmental or financial,” says Robert Lenahan, a partner at Fleetwood, Lenahan and McMullen, the firm that designed the home. The system pulls cold water out of the ground and uses it to cool air that is distributed around the house. And since it's hidden underground, there are no air conditioning units cluttering up the land.

In places with abundant underground hot springs (think Iceland), high-temperature water can be drawn up to heat houses, and steam can be used to generate electricity. In the U.S., low-temperature geothermal systems use ground source heat pumps to take advantage of the consistent temperatures below ground. Water or refrigeration fluid is circulated into the earth — where heat or cold is easily dissipated — and then returned to the surface to heat or cool a building.

Back above ground, photovoltaic panels that create electricity from the sun are a more common option.


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