Green Spaces Real Estate

Pacific Northwest Life and Living: Pocket parks and open spaces ~ OLAs and other pet places ~ Real estate and home graces

Friday, February 27, 2009

Keep the Pollen Out of Your Home and Energy Costs Down

From Realty Times:

Green homes are becoming increasingly more popular. Finding ways to advertise a home as being energy-efficient can spark a level of interest in prospective buyers. And as the seasons start to change and spring pollen floats into the air, having a solution to keep the pollen out of a home and save on a home's electricity bill is a plus.


Full Story: http://realtytimes.com/rtpages/20090227_pollenout.htm

Thursday, February 26, 2009

Edible Landscape Workshop coming in March

EDIBLE LANDSCAPE WORKSHOP ANNOUNCEMENT

What: Learn how to design and install your own edible landscape

When: Slide show March 19, 2009 / Four session workshop starting March 25, 2009

Where: Phinney Neighborhood Center, Seattle

Fee: Slide show - $30.00 / Workshop - $250.00 for four design sessions

Who Should Attend:
~ Homeowners & do-it-yourselfers looking to learn how to grow their own fruits, berries and vegetables.
~ Students looking to learn principles of sustainable landscape design.
~ Landscape professionals who want to incorporate edible landscaping into their clients yards.

Details: In this 4-part class, participants will draw an edible landscape plan customized for their yard and learn how to install basic elements of a functional garden. Two classroom sessions will introduce principles of sustainable design and help participants design their own edible landscape.
Hands-on skills will be learned in two field sessions where participants will learn how to:
Build a raised vegetable bed
Plant fruit trees and berries
Build an herb spiral

Design Sessions: March 25 & 30, 7:00 to 9:00 pm,Phinney Neighborhood Center

Field Sessions: March 29 & April 4, 9:00am to 1:00pm, location to be determined

Slide Show: March 19, 7:00pm to 9:00pm, Phinney Neighborhood Center

Facilitator:Michael Lockman, M.A. President & founder of WEdesign Inc.
A freelance writer and former adjunct professor in Antioch University's Environment and Community program, Michael holds an M.A. in Ecological Design.WEdesign was created in 1995 to offer organic and sustainable landscaping options for home and landowners in and around Seattle.

Contact:Michael Lockman
Phone: 206-459-7022
Email:michael@we-design.net
Web:www.we-design.net
Blog:http://ediblelandscapeseattle.blogspot.com/

Looking for live blogger at Built Green Conference

I was contacted by a media rep about blogging live for the keynote by Robert F. Kennedy Jr. at the Built Green Conference on March 6th. Unfortunately I can not go, (I am operating my company's real estate office), but wanted to do my part to see if I can make it happen - so it would almost be like I *was* there! It is Earth911 who is looking to connect with a live blogger.

Contact me if you are going and want to blog live and I can connect you with the media rep. It would be a great service to the rest of the world!

Here's the press release:

Robert F. Kennedy Junior to Keynote 2009 Built Green Conference

Region’s most prominent green building event will focus on the role of green building practices in the changing economy

Seattle (January 23, 2009) – Robert F. Kennedy Jr. will be the featured speaker at the March 6th, 2009 Built Green Conference at the Washington State Convention Center in Seattle. Mr. Kennedy, a long-time environmentalist, chief prosecuting attorney for the Hudson Riverkeepers, and president of the Waterkeeper Alliance, will speak to the ways businesses can utilize sound environmental policies and procedures to their benefit.

With a focus on green building and design practices, attendees of the 2009 Built Green conference will find practical information geared towards creating sustainable homes and communities. According to data from the Multiple Listing Service, homes featuring environmentally savvy designs have been selling for 4.8 percent more locally compared with non-green built homes. Four- and five-star Built Green certified homes sell an average of 24 percent faster than non-certified homes. Since the program began in 1999, Built Green has certified over 13,000 homes in King and Snohomish Counties.

“Homebuyers have become savvier about the benefits green building can provide, and are opting for green certified homes more frequently,” said Aaron Adelstein, executive director of Built Green of King and Snohomish Counties. “This conference will be the best resource for builders, designers and other professionals to find out about the value of green building – especially in the current economy.”

Speakers at the conference range from local builders specializing in green design and construction, to financial specialists who will discuss the role of green building in the economy, to marketing professionals who will address effective strategies for promoting green real estate projects and developments. Additional topics will include the market value of green-certified buildings and projects, financing solutions for energy efficiency retrofits, how to successfully market green-certified projects, and much more.

According to Adelstein, “We’ve been working on an agenda that addresses the practical needs of building professionals today. We’ve pulled together many of the top green building experts and thought leaders to ensure a truly worthwhile event.”

For information on this year’s Built Green conference, including registration and exhibitor information, visit www.builtgreenconference.com.

About Built Green
Built Green is an environmentally-friendly, non-profit, residential building program of the Master Builders Association of King and Snohomish Counties, developed in partnership with King County, Snohomish County, and other agencies in Washington State. The Built Green Web site (www.builtgreen.net) provides consumers with easy-to-understand rating systems, which quantify environmentally friendly building practices for remodeling and new home construction, communities and multi-family development units.

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Don't miss this ~ 2.27.09 7 PM Facets of the Gem: Ecovillage Experiments Around the World

Northwest Intentional Communities Association (NICA) is pleased to have Karen Litfin offer her fascinating slide presentation followed by Q&A. Come and discover the common thread between people of different cultures as they live and work together in ecovillages around the world to create a sustainable future.

Karen is Associate Professor of Political Science and Environmental Studies at UW. She is currently writing a book on the holistic consciousness that inspires the global ecovillage movement. Her research included a worldwide journey to ecovillages and interviews with hundreds of community members. One of her objectives in writing this book is to move her own life in a more holistic direction.

Friday, February 27th, 7 - 9 pm
No RSVP necessary, just come!
Cost: By donation
Where: Jackson Place Co-housing Common House
800 Hiawatha Place South Seattle, Washington 98144

For directions: http://www.seattlecohousing.org/
For info: email nica@ic.org

Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Greening Your Office Operations - free webinar

Just got an email from Sustainable Industries this morning about a free webinar. Lots of time to plan and put this on your calendar if you are interested in learning more about the following:

In this one-hour Web conference presented by Sustainable Industries and Citrix Online, get insight from the experts on how to improve your overall office operations. From purchasing practices to facilities management to garnering stakeholder buy-in, learn how to reduce your company's operating costs and its
carbon footprint.

Produced in conjunction with the 2009 Sustainable Industries Green Office Guide, this Webinar is an essential tool for business owners, facilities managers, Green Team members and other stakeholders.
Even if you are a one-person home office, you can be assured of learning SOMEthing to green your office activities. Register for free webinar

Monday, February 23, 2009

Win a FREE massage in my "Thanks For Referring" drawing

I am conducting a "thanks for referring" drawing! Refer a Potential Home Buyer friend, family member, colleague or co-worker to me via my blog/email, Twitter (@GreenSpacesRE, #SeattleGreenRE), or Facebook page through March 31st and be entered into a drawing to win a gift card good for a complimentary massage session at one of over 800 Massage Envy locations nationwide.


Or you can refer by phone and call me at 206.686.HOME. I would love to catch up with you!


Potential Home Buyer must be an active real estate shopper within my service area. Remember, I am a real estate professional and a green home specialist. I can provide real estate and relocation advice for both traditional home purchases or "green home" acquisitions in the greater Puget Sound region.


This random drawing will take place after March 31, 2009. The gift card is good for an Introductory one hour massage session, which consists of a 50-minute massage and time for consultation and dressing. Hog it for yourself, or pass it on to someone you care about. Find a Massage Envy location near you.


So tell a friend and get a few moments of that R&R you deserve!


*****


Example of Western Washington Massage Envy locations:

Capitol Hill #0134 In the Broadway Market at Harrison Street & Broadway Ave above QFC Grocery on the 2nd Floor
Northgate Mall #0204 In the Northgate Mall at 5th and Northgate Way by DSW and Bed, Bath & Beyond
Issaquah #0702 (Coming Soon) In the Commons at Issaquah Shopping Center at Gilman Boulevard and 7th Avenue NW

Bellevue #0016 In Ross Plaza Shopping Center by Video Only and Ross
Kirkland #0035 In the Juanita Village at 116th St NE & 98th Ave next to Walgreen's
Shoreline #0161 In the Ballinger Village Shopping Center at 205th Ave & Ballinger Way next to Blockbuster
Redmond #0015 In the Bear Creek Village Shopping Center by Safeway and Starbucks
Newcastle #0018 In the Coal Creek Marketplace at SE 69th Way & Coal Creek Parkway SE next to the QFC
Renton Landing #0706 Located in the Renton Landing Shopping Center on Park Avenue North & North 10th Street across from Target
Woodinville #0026 Woodinville Plaza at 140th & NE Woodinville-Duvall Rd near TJ Maxx and Albertson's
Mill Creek #0088 In Mill Creek Town Center near LA Fitness
Federal Way #0081 In Federal Way Crossings across from Costco
Everett Mall #0422 In the Everett Mall at Everett Mall Way and Interstate 5 inside the Mall, next to Macy’s
Gig Harbor #0667 In "Uptown" Gig Harbor near Galaxy Theatre, across from Ben & Jerry's
Tacoma #0089 In Tacoma Mall between Gene Juarez and Macy's
Bonney Lake #0670 In the Junction 192 Town Center
Puyallup #0053 In Meridian Place at Meridian St South & 116th St East next to Sports Authority
Olympia #0468 In the Westfield Capital Mall Promenade, opposite Borders and Bed Bath and Beyond
West Vancouver #0256 In the Hazel Dell Towne Center at I-5 and 99th Street near Target
East Vancouver #0257 In the Columbia Tech Center at 192nd and Mill Plain Blvd near the Home Depot


Massage Envy gift card terms include: Prices subject to change. Rates and services may vary by location. Additional local taxes and fees may apply.

Friday, February 20, 2009

Don't miss this ~ Sustainable Spaces. Beautiful Places.

Purported to be the last NW Flower and Garden Show, it is going on now at the Washington State Convention and Trade Center. I got my early bird ticket last weekend and saved $4, and Saturday morning my husband is dropping me off on his way to a BMW car event so I also escape parking costs.

I love NWFGS - the smell is the best part. The theme this year also struck close to my heart, "Sustainable Spaces. Beautiful Places." According to an article in the Seattle Times,


"There's a focus on container gardening for condos and small spaces at this year's show," says spokesman Dan Branley. "And with the popularity of 'staycations,' there's lots of inspiration to make your garden a relaxing getaway at home."

Since I moved to a townhouse in summer of '07, chosen in part for its 200 square foot deck, I now find a new reason to really be interested in those FREE seminars that are almost impossible to get into. *sigh* Remember to pack water and snacks and interesting reading material with you if you plan on attending seminars, since you do spend a lot of time sitting around waiting to get in.

Read Focus is on small at Northwest Flower and Garden Show

And enjoy the show!

Thursday, February 19, 2009

A Green Remodel from the Ground Up: Ranch House Revival

Natural Home Magazine does some great exposés on deep green remodeling. Today's email:

A Green Remodel from the Ground Up: Ranch House Revival
When Suzanne Jones and Rob Elia bought their 1970s Northern California ranch home, they knew a green renovation was within reach and necessary. They traded out shag carpet, poor insulation and outdated appliances for recycled-newspaper insulation, tile floors and solar panels.
They've included a great photo gallery that shows use of recycled materials in a creative way. They also include a list of "the good stuff"

The Good Stuff

Solar electricity and hot water

Passive solar heating; no air conditioning

50 percent fly-ash concrete in walkway, entry slab, foundation repairs

Salvaged wood used whenever possible throughout house, deck, fencing, siding

Forest Stewardship Council–certified wood used when new lumber was required

Fallen oak from property used as columns, benches, counters, railings

Rainwater catchment (from Galvalume metal roof) used for irrigation

Brick pathway made from salvaged chimney brick

Native landscaping

Most furniture purchased used

Energy Star dishwasher, refrigerator, washing machine

Kitchen cabinets made from bamboo and FSC maple with natural, nontoxic finishes

Vermont slate tiles in kitchen chosen instead of foreign slate

Granite counters from salvaged remnants

Compact fluorescent lighting where possible

Salvaged bathroom tiles and tubs

Bathroom counters made from recycled glass or aluminum

Dual-flush toilets

Double-paned, insulated windows.

Insulation in roof (HCFC-free foam), walls (wet-spray cellulose from recycled newspaper) and floors (recycled denim batts).

All demolition materials, fixtures and plumbing recycled, reused or disposed of responsibly

And that, my dear readers, is how it is done!

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Home buyers want to know, "Why should I buy a green home?"

There is a great section on the Built Green FAQ page that I have turned into a handout when I meet with home buyers (or builders) that is a TOP TEN list for why to buy a Built Green™ home.

I rephrase that to "any green home", since there are additional programs now available that make a home green. And this top ten list of why people should buy a green home is the same for people thinking about building a green home. You just can't go wrong with better health, reduced operating expenses, and a more positive effect on the environment during the construction phase of the home.

It is true that green, healthy homes tend to run a little smaller in total square footage and cost just a little bit more on a per square foot basis. But I will argue that the justification for a smaller and more efficient home is worth the added cost. And I am not saying that because I sell real estate. I personally bought a 3-Star Built Green Certified Home in the Built Green Certified Community of High Point in West Seattle. I walk the walk.



What Are the Top Ten Reasons to Buy a Built Green™ Home?

Contractors in King and Snohomish Counties already build to some of the toughest energy, air quality, stormwater management, and water efficiency standards in the nation. Based on choices by the builder and homeowner, Built Green™ goes beyond even these standards to give you added value, added peace of mind. Following, in no particular order, are ten reasons to buy a Built Green home:


More Money In The Piggy Bank

A Built Green home typically saves money on operating costs because of more efficient energy use with such features as extra insulation, more efficient water heaters, lighting and appliances, and the use of natural daylighting techniques. Many Built Green features save money on construction costs up-front.


Less “New” Odors and Better Indoor Air

Using low-VOC and low-toxic interior paints and finishes can reduce toxins, thereby increasing indoor air quality in a home. Carpeting can be tacked rather than glued with adhesives that can off-gas over time. Mechanical ventilation can be improved by installing a “positive” system that exhausts indoor air at a slightly slower rate than fresh air is brought inside. Improving indoor air can be especially helpful for residents with sensitivities to allergens.


Saves Old-Growth Forests

Rapidly renewable materials such as bamboo, wheatgrass, cork and strawboard can be managed, grown and harvested in a sustainable way, and can effectively replace lumber from old-growth trees. Engineered lumber uses smaller pieces of fast-growing wood to obtain the same sizes and higher strengths as lumber milled from large old-growth forests. Plastic lumber made from recycled plastic jugs can also be used for decking, sills and siding -- replacing what are traditionally wood products.


Happier Salmon

Water conservation can be achieved by installing drought tolerant plants and less lawn in landscaped areas. Porous paving can be used in driveways and walkways to allow rainwater to seep into the ground instead of running off. Strict erosion control methods are used to help reduce sedimentation into streams, and natural features of a site can be protected. All of these measures benefit salmon habitat.


More Couch Potato Time

It takes less work and resources to maintain certain materials in a home. For example, siding, decking and trim made from plastic lumber needs little or no painting. Durable materials such as stone, tile and slate last longer and therefore need replacement less often.


Reduced Breezes Inside The Home

A home can be sealed against the outside elements with advanced caulking that goes beyond basic practice. Typically, exterior walls are caulked around windows and doorframes, and on interior walls where they intersect with exterior ceilings. Air sealing can be checked for effectiveness with an optional “blower door” test.


Healthier Yard with Homegrown Topsoil

During construction of a house or development, the topsoil that is removed for grading can be stockpiled and, later, reapplied to the site for healthier soils. Soil amendments can be added, such as compost, to further promote a good soil for plantings that will have a better establishment.


Reduces Dependence on Fossil Fuels & Promotes Cleaner Air

By promoting the use of local materials, transportation and other costs can be reduced. By including pedestrian access and access to mass transit, projects can encourage the decreased use of automobiles, thereby reducing our foreign oil consumption and helping maintain cleaner air outdoors.


Less Trash

Built Green builders and remodelers post jobsite recycling plans and recycle as much as possible of scrap building materials such as lumber, wall board, concrete, cardboardand packaging. They can also incorporate many materials that contain recycled content or have been salvaged. This helps reduce the amount of material going to our already overburdened landfills.


Promotes Businesses Committed To “Green”

The member companies of Built Green include lenders with special financing for Built Green homes; product manufacturers of durable, recycled content, non-toxic, energy-efficient and recyclable materials; service providers of utilities, engineering, consulting, real estate, interior design and home maintenance; builders and remodelers who are willing to not only build green but to go to the extra effort and cost to have their projects certified as Built Green; architects who can design a green home with you every step of the way; and our local governments that are committed to protecting the quality of life for all of us!

If you decide to buy
If you think a green home is for you, be sure to work with a green home professional. I am a Built Green Certified Professional Real Estate agent, and recently changed agencies to be able to provide more green services to my clients. I am happy to be with GreenWorks Realty, the very first real estate company in the USA to focus on green and healthy homes. Bleeding edge, baby!

Photo and "Top Ten" List Source: BuiltGreen.net

Seattle's '09 green festival is a "must GO to" event

Hot out of the Inbox is another email reminder from Seattle Green Festival to celebrate what is working in our communities! You absolutely must GO to this event.

You can reduce your own carbon footprint for attending by signing up to get or give a ride at PickupPal.com

Seattle Green Festival
Saturday and Sunday, March 28 & 29
Washington State Convention & Trade Center
800 Convention Place
www.greenfestivals.org

You want to be green, but you have questions.What can I do to save money on my electric bill? How can I green my home on a tight budget? What can I do to support positive change in my own community?

In Seattle, you’ll find answers…Join Sustainable Communities All Over Puget Sound (SCALLOPS) for interactive sessions all weekend on topics ranging from emergency preparedness to energy conservation efforts. This is a great opportunity to connect with your community on issues that affect you most. And how can you support your local economy with your diet? Alice Waters and Bryant Terry, two fantastic chefs, will highlight healthy cooking using local, seasonal and sustainable ingredients.

Young people will also have an opportunity to connect with the causes they are passionate about. Find out What Youth Can Do at Saturday evening’s panel discussion or Sunday morning at Keeping it Real, Keeping it Green, both facilitated by young local leaders. Plus, don’t miss Pecha Kucha, a place for designers to meet, network and show their work in public. Green Festival’s edition will feature green building.

Visionary Speakers also include...Laura Flanders, Jerome Ringo, Amy Goodman, Damali Ayo, Dune Lankard, Lawrence Lessig, Paul Stamets, John Perkins, Belvie Rooks, David Korten, Vicki Robin, Malkia Cyril, Alex Steffen and many more.

PLUS...Spring has sprung! Start it off right in our green marketplace with thousands of eco-friendly products and services screened for their commitment to people and the planet—everything from natural body products and organic cotton clothing to Fair Trade gifts and sustainable home remodeling materials. And don't forget to check out the Organic Valley Kids' Zone – Community Action –Organic Foods Dining – Organic Beer & Wine Garden – Green Festival Bookstore and Author Signings – Music Stage – ASL Interpretation – Electronics Recycling – Special Green Week Pre-Festival EventsAll at a nearly zero-waste event!

Your all-inclusive 2-day pass: $15
Only $10 (at the door) for seniors, public transit and bike riders, union members, students
FREE – Children 18 and under, volunteers, Green America and Global Exchange members

Seattle-area February community events and classes with a green focus

By-Product Synergy Northwest Community-Wide Networking Event
Seattle City Hall, Bertha Landes Room, 8:00am - 1:30pm
February 18th PREREGISTER
Seattle

Revisiting Sustainable Development in a New Era
University of Washington, Parrigton Commons, 7-8 pm
February 18th PREREGISTER
Seattle

Community-Wide By-Product Synergy Networking Event
City Hall from 8am to 1:30pm
February 18th
Seattle

Educational Green Home Tour
5-Star Built Green & Energy Star Rated Homes
February 21st
Seattle

AWEA Wind Power Project Siting Workshop
Tacoma Public Utilities, 3628 S. 35th Street
February 24-25th
Tacoma

Green Building -- The New Economy and the Future of the Building Industry
The Grand Hyatt
February 26th PREREGISTER
Seattle

Make Your Home Green Seminar
ecoHAUS in Bellevue
February 26th & 28th
Seattle

Northwest Environmental Education Council:Intro to Integral Sustainability
Northwest Environmental Training Center from 9am to 4pm
February 28th
Seattle

Monday, February 16, 2009

Twitterfeed test

Please disregard.

My big career/J-O-B announcement

Well, I still haven't signed the contract, but beginning TODAY, I am the Office Administrator for GreenWorks Realty in Seattle.

Unfortunately the agency had to layoff the Office Manager - the company was proud to pay a living wage and provide health benefits for Audrey Triantafillidis, who managed the office for over two years. She accomplished things for the company that I personally would not have had the energy or motivation for, probably. She created formal marketing, developed and maintained the web site, implemented a human resources system, among other great achievements. It is unfortunate that the current real estate market has not enabled the agents and broker to retain her. I liked Audrey immediately and really wish I could work WITH her, instead of replacing her at her desk. It is sad.

BUT it is good for me since it allows me to really commit 100% to my real estate business instead of spending most of my time looking for a J-O-B (it really is a 4 letter word, it just looks like a 3 letter word). I had a few interviews between October and today, but had not managed to be "the one" to get the prize. Perhaps it was because I truly was meant to be at the real estate office - I have been branding myself as a green home expert and real estate agent for almost two years via my blog (greenspacesrealestate.com) and I have worked so hard to make a name for myself in this niche, it made me sick to think of giving it up.

But now I don't have to! I am only being paid a token, in fact, it is a third of what I was making in my last contract. But to be an agent at the office (25 hours a week, planning on 5+ hours a day), keep the lights on and the papers moving, and being able to put my A-board on the sidewalk and work with walk-in clients - could be invaluable. The office is on a great street in the Greenwood neighborhood of North Seattle. Next door is Bambu Organic Salon where I can get my hair done without chemicals, and on the end of our building is Zak and Zoe's, a great pet store that hands out treats to visitors. Which is good, because SOPHIA is my co-worker and companion in this venture, and will be going to the office with me every day. And Greenlake is nearby, and we will have available to us - and no excuses to avoid, really - the pinnacle of human and dog walking locations.

The announcement sent out to my company included a brief work history, which I am including here since it enhances my "profile" information (on the right sidebar) without being too long.

Wendy’s earliest background began in the property management industry and she worked in regional offices of multi-state and national real estate asset management corporations. For a few years she was a background investigator for multifamily housing. Later she moved to office and retail management and was on the building management team at the Columbia Tower downtown. She and her husband, Steve, were married on the O deck (73rd floor).

Later, Wendy worked independently for a Windermere Real Estate agent and after a year became an agent on her own. In the last 5 years Wendy directed the personal marketing campaigns for loan officers, created a client support system and prospect management process specific to the mortgage banking industry, and also served as a right-of-way (road projects) and relocation (SeaTac Airport 3rd runway) subcontracting agent for municipal contracts.

She has provided office management and administrative support for two non-profits (one affordable housing, one environmental) in addition to transaction management for the last real estate broker she worked for. She has had her real estate license for over 5 years (cumulative), and became a Built Green Certified Professional Real Estate agent in 2007. She is very excited to be working with like-minded professionals who have passion for both real estate and healthy homes and lifestyles.

You will see her and her rescued Italian greyhound, Sophia, at the office 25 hours a week. Her hours will vary to both accommodate the work load in the office and foot traffic in the neighborhood. If you have specific needs at the office, please call for staffing information.


So that is my big announcement and I am very happy to be able to commit to my real estate business at such an intense level. If you know of someone thinking of buying or selling a home and in need of real estate advice, I am a FULL-TIME AGENT and am happy to provide phone consultation or email communication with folks who have questions regarding the condition of today's market.

Thank you for your support!

Rare and gorgeous "carriage home" comes on market in High Point (West Seattle)
























I was driving home from meeting with some ladies in SE Seattle for a green building consultation Sunday afternoon when I saw signs leading from SW Graham Street onto 30th and I wondered what could possibly be for sale there? And there it was - one of only 4 carriage homes
of this type in High Point built in 2006. I didn't tour the 'hood until April '07, and all of these units were long sold and occupied so I never had the opportunity to see the inside before now.

I stopped because I knew there was a little dog that lived here, and I would rather not disturb her during the week, and it gave me the opportunity to meet the listing agent. Of course, the unit that just came on the market is staged the way most people want to live - funny thing, tho, is that someone does actually live here, and the house always looks like this (you can tell it just does).

Outside of the home is a small front yard with nice gardening space, and a cute covered front porch. Inside on the ground level is a quest room - or office/den. Attached is a one car garage with extra room for storage. On the main level is a SWEET kitchen with a great tile bar, and windows all around the living space. There also is a small deck. I have to commend the current owner for choosing to upgrade to half-shutters on the windows. They let in light and air if the windows are open, but provide extensive privacy. There is a pantry, stack high efficiency washer/dryer, and 3/4 bath on the main level.

The top floor loft is a master suite, complete with private bath and a very well-organized walk-in closet. The interior architecture is unique, and it is a vaulted yet cozy and romantic "attic bedroom".

The home is well-appointed, and painted in contemporary themes. Of course, the home is 4-star Built Green Certified, and has a heat pump that helps with winter heating AND SUMMER AIR CONDITIONING. I know it is only February, but I am already thinking about the hot summer days just around the corner, and am envious of who gets to have A/C (my home does NOT). The listing agent may not know of its certification since the owner may not actually have the certificate on hand. In which case, she should be contacting Built Green with her address and requesting a copy!

Click to see more details and a photo tour of this great home in West Seattle. Square footage is quotes as 1,420 per King County Records.
6309 30th Ave SW - High Point Carriage Home

If you would like to see it in person, and would like a tour of the community (which is also Built Green certified), EMAIL or call me at 206.686.HOME (4663). After all, I am the High Point real estate expert!

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Saturday, February 14, 2009

$30k price reduction, "traditional" home in Upper Rainier Beach

In the green real estate industry, we distinguish environmentally certified "green" homes from non-certified homes by referring to all other homes as "traditional". I have a traditional home listing in SE Seattle, and the seller has agreed to a $30,000 price reduction.





This turn-key home leaves you guilt-free when adding your personal touches. Merely move in and decorate—or manifest your dreams with some hard-core remodeling.

Fully fenced back yard for your 4-legged best friend(s). Lots of great gardening space. Built with pride in 1945. Step light on the Earth and live in a “recycled” home that has great green spaces!

2+ bedrooms, 1 full bath, 1090 sq ft fin, 1780 sq ft total. Partially finished basement, extra finished space. New gas furnace, cabinets, fresh paint. Refinished hardwood floors. 2 fireplaces. 2 garages - 1 attached, 1 detached. Corner level lot, approx. 6,000 sq ft, fully fenced back yard.

Near Kubota Garden in Upper Rainier Beach neighborhood, SE Seattle. On bus route 7, convenient to new light rail station, downtown, Tukwila, Renton, airport, etc.

Click to find full listing details for 10246 62nd Avenue South, Seattle

Every home can be a green home with GreenWorks Healthy Home Package. The full package is offered to GreenWorks homebuyers as a gift and the assessment is offered to the public for a fee. It is designed to improve the comfort, health, energy efficiency and durability of your home environment. Check it out and call 206.686.HOME for more information.

Don't miss this ~ Green Home Tours in Seattle

One of my colleagues at GreenWorks Realty has launched a new web site to coordinate green home tours in the Seattle area, GreenHomeTours.net. Typically these tours will be of what we call "Deep Green" homes, 4- and 5-star Built Green Certified and sometimes also ENERGY STAR certified homes. The tours are free, and space is limited so you must register in advance.

Dean Martinson, a fellow agent, says

Join us as we explore the features and benefits of green projects from around Seattle. Learn first hand what makes these homes sustainable, energy efficient, and healthy.

Each month your tour guides will take you through two projects -one finished home and one work in progress. We will see behind the walls and learn about the ideas behind the building process. In the completed home we will see how it all comes together and take a moment to marvel at the craftsmanship and the beautiful finishes.
Dean's next green home tour date is February 21st, 2009 beginning at 11:00 am at a beautiful home in the Crown Hill neighborhood. It is impressively green, and also skillfully incorporates outdoor living and privacy in a close-quarters site location. I loved the house, and would move there in a heartbeat if I didn't love my Built Green Community of High Point and West Seattle so much.

According to his web site, Dean's tour includes one completed home and one home under construction, for that "behind the walls" view of what makes a home green. He will help answer the following questions regarding green homes:
  • What is sustainable?
  • What makes a home energy efficient?
  • How can we save water?
  • What makes a home more healthy?
  • How do we improve Indoor Air Quality (IAQ)?
  • Certified Built Green? Energy Star? LEED?
  • Day-lighting? Advanced Framing?
  • Energy Audits? Thermal Imaging?
  • What can you do to make your own home energy efficient, comfortable, and healthy?
  • Each tour explores lots of topics with real life examples.

I hope you take this opportunity to get some "behind the walls" green education. These green home tours will become a regular feature, and I will be scheduling new High Point tours this spring via my Meetup.com group, Green Spaces Real Estate. These tours include an outdoor exploration of the environmental features that were built in to this community that garnered it Built Green certification. Select homes and condominiums for sale will also be a part of the tour.

Monday, February 9, 2009

Traveling Green Isn't Black and White

Hot out of the Inbox is an email from the Rick Steves travel empire in Edmonds, Europe Through the Back Door.

I am posting it here since you may not be on the mailing list. He has a very good message about air travel and the CO2 emissions that come from it - and that once in Europe, you can use rail travel as a way to reduce your travel carbon footprint.

My only recommendation to you is to not try to take a train anywhere on Christmas Eve. We went from Milan to Torino on that day, and we had to stand in the breezeway most of the way it was so insanely crowded. He probably warned us against it in his books that we bought and took with us but had not erad all the way thru yet.

Dear Traveler,

Traveling 'green' is something every thoughtful traveler should strive for. Earth's the only planet we've got, and we need to keep it healthy. But for Americans traveling to Europe, there are practical trade-offs that make traveling green closer to shades of gray than black and white.

Your flight to Europe will unavoidably spew lots of CO2 into the atmosphere, and for the time being there is no practical alternative. To try and make up for the environmental damage, a growing number of travelers are purchasing carbon offsets, which direct money into worthwhile things like reforestation and alternative energy projects. If this 21st-century way of "paying indulgences" helps people travel with clearer consciences, I'm all for it, because I've always believed that travel makes us better-informed, more thoughtful citizens of our planet — something we need now more than ever.

Thankfully, once you land in Europe, you'll have more control over how green your trip is.

Flying is often the fastest (and sometimes even the cheapest) way to get around Europe, but flying just piles on to the CO2 impact of your transatlantic flights.

Europe's comprehensive, energy-efficient rail network gives travelers a practical alternative. In many cases (figuring in how time-consuming it can be to get to an airport, go through security, etc.), going by train can be just as quick. It's certainly more comfortable, and here's the bonus: you can feel good about exploring Europe with a carbon footprint that's 70% to 90% smaller than if you'd flown. Need another good reason? Eurail Passes are even cheaper now than they were a year ago.

To learn more about the greening of European rail travel, check out this month's Travel News. You'll also find articles on my favorite way to fly (without a plane) from France to Italy over Mt. Blanc, some exciting new tours we've just launched...and a Travel Tale that bares all.

However you choose to explore our planet, may your travels be thoughtful — and happy.

Rick

Dump this house!

Great segment on the Today Show! Click here to Read and Watch: Dump this house! How to sell your home fast 5 mistakes anxious sellers make, plus tips to get the highest sticker price

So, you need to get rid of your house and you need to do it quick. Don’t panic. This may not seem like the best time to dump your house, but with Barbara Corcoran's advice, it's possible.

Friday, February 6, 2009

Loft Envy ~ tons of daydreaming material

I took a green mini-tour the other day, and seriously fell in love with a hip modern loft in South Park, right across the street from the new and equally modern looking South Park Library branch.

It was nearing dark as I pulled up, as you can tell from my photo here, since it was the last stop on my Area 140 e-cert tour (translation: environmentally certified homes in the West Seattle area). I saw the library across the street and almost drooled at the thought of living right in the center of things - at least for South Park - alone with my little dog and a cat or two, across the street from the library and not too far from the trail by the river. Unfortunately it was too dark for me to get a picture of the library. This photo I took from the Google Maps street view, where you can get a 360 degree view as if you were standing in the middle of the street.

Personally, I don't think I can live in an open floor plan of only 700 feet *with* another person, so I would also have to not be married to continue my fantasy. I celebrated my 11th anniversary this last New Year's Eve, so that is not likely to happen of course!

I used to work in South Park, back in 2001 I was office manager at ECOSS. I also had a p-patch at Marra Farm. So continue the fantasy of also being able to walk to work and to my garden...the only thing missing down here is a major grocery story. And a post office. Looks like I would continue to go to Westwood up the hill from here to attend to those sorts of things...



















My life is obviously not in synch with my fantasy world. It's probably better off that way, since if fantasy were reality, I wouldn't have anything to think about when driving from one property to another. But look at this place - these photos are linked from the Pb Elemental's "Work" section of their web site.

Pb Elemental (a neat nod to the chemical element of Lead, Pb being the notation for that element), is at the forefront of modern architecture in my book. Just look at the awnings that keep you dry (and shades some of the glass from the sun) while you enjoy your patio on a warm but rainy spring day - they are solar panels. Oh, did I forget to mention this was a 4 star Built Green Certified home? It also is certified by the ENERGY STAR program. Which is why it was on my tour... it even already has a rain barrel installed, near the front door.


I can't help it - I just want you to enjoy these professional photos marketing this property with me. I took some pictures, too, but they just are not as good as this...



















I mean seriously, who couldn't go to *town* with awesome planters on this patio? The bamboo screen along the border is already installed and growing to increase the privacy of the sunken deck and patio. SWEET.



















I can't even begin to imagine how I would laze about my living room, reading books and relaxing, with my entire wall open to my patio and my dog and cat(s) running in and out of the house, enjoying the sun.



















I love the cabinets in the kitchen. The swing up, and they are solid. Look at the ceiling...beautiful wood. There is a powder room off the kitchen for guests.

















Completely open industrial stairwell to the loft bedroom. There is a great laundry nook at the top of the stairs with uber-efficient washer and dryer, and a ventilating fan (indoor air quality is one of the mainstays of green home design). There is a large clothes closet, a mechanical closet, and full bathroom upstairs.

The loft may be only 700 sq ft or so (I think Pb Elemental's info says 670 square feet), but it is open, bright, has the ultimate in interior appointments, and I am still daydreaming about the place a week later. It certainly made an impression. The company purchased over 10 different properties in South Park and is almost single-handedly remaking the streetscape. There was a map on the counter showing all of the properties the company had acquired, and they are spread out nicely in the neighborhood. (Could not find that information on their web site, tho.)

Maybe in another lifetime, this will be the place for me. Maybe in YOUR lifetime, it IS the place FOR YOU. Click here for listing information.

If you would like to know more about South Park and West Seattle, how convenient it is to all points of the compass, and more about the last available of 4 loft homes and a townhome that were built on this particular lot on South Cloverdale Street, send me an email using the button on the right hand side of the page!

Wednesday, February 4, 2009

As loco-org movement grows, more suitably sustainable "dining out" options emerge


























No, this is not about pork butts - even though they are very cute here. There was an interesting article in the PI today, Let's be honest about the local-organic-sustainable approach.

In it, Leslie Kelly talks about a great sushi experience in Whitefish, Montana - and wonders how a restaurant that touts local organic food can get away with serving sushi clearly not from Montana.

She says

I think there's going to be a sea change as far as the whole local-organic-sustainable movement at restaurants is concerned. At least, I hope that change is coming. Chefs can be more upfront about their desire to put quality first, maybe calling their efforts "best practices fare".

I can't agree with her more. The first example she holds up as a good example of this is Chef Jason Wilson at Crush. He says he "tries to balance the so-called carbon footprint by taking measures to offset the environmental impact of importing olive oil, arborio rice and unusual spices from a company in San Francisco."

Not only is Chef Wilson outspoken about the direction he is further going with what was already a recognized unique restaurant in the loco-org movement, but he also walks the walk. He was the first big-name Guest Chef for P-Patch Trust's annual Chef in the Garden event - the first year he opened his restaurant (2004). I was serving on the Board of Directors then, and it was an amazing meal, and he was a pleasure to work with from a planning perspective.

Leslie goes on to say


Maybe it's up to us consumers to be more vocal about menu accountability. When you're considering what to order, don't be shy about asking where the ingredients came from. The best example I've seen of a restaurant truly committed to executing the local-organic-sustainable mission is at Taste at the Seattle Art Museum, where the menu features at least one dish repared with ingredients sourced from within 60 miles.



I have to agree with Leslie. I do ask when I am in a restaurant that I feel cares about what its consumers think and believe in. This is in part because I am interested - but I also am being an acitivist in the sense that I want the restaurant to know people are asking, and we better hear the kinds of answers we want to hear or we are going to eat elsewhere. When my husband and I last ate at TASTE at SAM we were proud as we could be to see both eggs and beef from Skagit River Ranch in Sedro Woolley featured on the TASTE menu. We even enjoyed deviled eggs as a side dish, just to be able to say we had supported one of our favorite farmer market vendors! Not to mention, you can't beat super fresh local and organic eggs! We have visited the farm many times, it is a great experience for anyone who wants to see where their food comes from - or just wants to visit the country for an afternoon. The farm store is open Saturdays, 10 AM to 6 PM - and I dare say, there will probably be something to sample in the kitchen!

Leslie also mentions Sea Breeze Farm from Vashon Island, and I highly recommend their smoked bacon. You won't find smokier bacon anywhere! We are lucky in that they are a vendor at our local farmers market every Sunday!

A green cemetery lets one exit in an eco-friendly way

I don't know why I think about what is going to happen to my body after I die. I had identified an eco-friendly way to deal with my remains even before the eco-burial portrayed in the show "Six Feet Under". My choice has been Eternal Reefs, but only after they have a west coast reef location.

Here is a new article about Washington state green cemetaries. Maybe by the time I die - hopefully not for a long while - there will be even MORE green choices! But it doesn't get much more green than this.

Read A green cemetery lets one exit in an eco-friendly way