The Natural Balance House, the first home in the San Juan Islands to
seek LEED Platinum certification, features a massive rainwater cistern,
geothermal heating and an Orca-cam that provides truly killer views. For this month’s installment of “Evergreen homes” a series of posts in
which I spotlight great green homes from my home state of Washington —
I’m stepping away from the green building hotbed that is Seattle (the
projects that I featured in March and April were both within Emerald
City limits) … way far away. Today’s featured “Evergreen home,” the
Natural Balance House, is located about 100 miles by car and ferry from
Seattle, in the bustling little town of Friday Harbor on beautiful San
Juan Island.
Armada House in Naturally Design and Beautiful Balance |
The LEED Platinum-seeking Natural Balance House is a testament to the
concept that green home building can be done right (and then some)
outside of a green building-crazy metropolis of more than 600,000
people. The waterfront home, designed by British Canadian firm Blue Sky
Design and built by San Juan Island-based Ravenhill Construction,
received a fair amount of press from both green building websites and
local media outlets this past winter during its final months of
construction. Now, with the home completed just several weeks ago,
owners Glen and Deb Bruels are opening the doors of their low-impact
retirement residence to the public for tours every Saturday in May from
11 a.m to 4 p.m.
Armada House in Naturally Design |
That said, Friday Harbor isn't the most easily accessible place on earth
(unless you just happen to be tooling around the San Juan Islands in
your private seaplane) but if you live or are visiting the area, by all
means stop by.
If your May travel plans don't call for the San Juan Islands, no sweat,
as the Natural Balance House is a green building showcase of sorts, not
just a private residence. Having fastidiously documented the building of
their home through blog entries and photos, the Bruels hope their home
will be both inspirational and educational. Hell, not every home, no
matter how exceptionally eco-friendly, has its own website, Twitter
account and Facebook page.
Natural Balance House |
Not surprisingly, the 3,600-square-foot home’s laundry list of
eco-friendly features is impressive: Geothermal in-floor radiant
heating, LED lighting and energy-efficient appliances throughout, solar
hot water heating, an advanced home automation system, a heat recovery
ventilation system, structurally insulated panel (SIP) roofing,
triple-glazed windows, low-flow Kohler fixtures, reclaimed wood
furniture from Meyer Wells, salvaged wood cabinetry and flooring,
sustainable landscaping, and more you name it, the Natural Balance
House has it.
Modern Barn House Balance |
Perhaps the most remarkable feature of the Natural Balance House is the
19,500-gallon rainwater cistern that acts as the sole source of water
for the residence. Yep, all of the water used in the home, even for
drinking, is reclaimed rainwater. When relying strictly on rainwater
harvesting having such a massive cistern does help (check out the view
into it from cistern from the repurposed ship hatch that’s in the master
bedroom closet, below) as does having a 3,000-square-foot
vegetation-covered roof that naturally pre-filters rainwater in addition
to moderating heat gain and loss through the roof.
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