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Cover, October 2007
Bone of Contention
The Saracheks were required to plant a wall of bushes and trees to conceal photovoltaic panels from their neighbors.

It's Not Easy Being Green
A family builds a super-efficient Energy Star home in Scarsdale but has to fight the town for the right to install solar panels.
BY SYLVIA O'HAGAN, PHOTOS BY ROY GUMPEL


Despite all the advances in ecofriendly design, green building still carries certain "crunchy" connotations and suggests a self- and style-sacrificing lifestyle.

One house, however, belies everything you ever thought about green building. Heather and Joe Sarachek's new prestige home showcases how eco-minded building can be not only what's best for the environment, but also impressively sleek, sophisticated, and state-of-the-art.

The large kitchen, with enough room for the Saracheks and their five children, features cherry cabinets and quarzite counters and has windows and a French door that look onto the terrace.
This green glamour project did not, however, come without a price—and more than a little controversy. In addition to the added cost of going "stealth green," as the Saracheks' building contractor, Rob Knorr of Nordic Construction, describes it, there was also the matter of a dispute with the Saracheks' town, the wealthy suburb of Scarsdale, and immediate neighbors regarding one of the home's most important sustainable energy feature: solar panels.

By the time the dust had settled, the Saracheks had anted up over $20,000 in costs and delays to win the fight to garner clean electricity from solar panels on their home. According to the couple, the outcome was more than worth all the hassle. "We need to care about the world we will leave for future generations," says Joe.

In the sleek downstairs powder room are stone floors of varying natural colors.

Building To Higher Standards
After a move to Scarsdale from Manhattan, and first living in another home in the Quaker Ridge section of Scarsdale, the Saracheks bought a new home in the same neighborhood. What sold them was a large, flat yard with plenty of room for their large family: four boys and a girl ranging in age from 15 months to 13 years. The house itself, however, was not a charmer: a large ranch, typical of the neighborhood. The couple first thought to expand it, but the house was found to have extensive water damage. "We have five kids, and just wanted to be comfortable," explains Heather about their decision to tear down and build a new home. "We kept telling our architect, 'We just want to be able to open the windows'—something we had trouble doing in our previous homes!"

Working with the New York City– and Los Angeles–based architectural firm Felhandler/Steeneken (www.fswarchitects.com) and Nordic Construction of Pound Ridge (914-242-0207), the Saracheks decided to build to the environmental standards the couple had come to embrace.

"We have always been a very health-minded family," explains Heather. "We eat right...never use pesticides...so when it was time for us to build a new home, we knew we wanted it to be as energy efficient and ecologically conscious as possible."

That meant building to Energy Star standards, which ensures that the house is at least 30 percent more efficient than code. (The house has yet to receive its official rating.)

While the new home kept the footprint of the original home, the similarities end there. The new structure, which took about two years to complete, is a stately 6,600-square-foot English Arts and Crafts–style home with a modern interior and six bedrooms. Though the family moved into the house in April of this year, finishing touches are still being made. "It never seems to end," says Heather, laughing.

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GREEN EVENTS

> 2/18—ULI New York – Healthcare Real Estate: Strategy and Investment in an Economic Recovery (New York City). The demand for healthcare real estate, particularly medical office buildings and other ambulatory care facilities located on hospital campuses or sponsored by hospitals, will continue to grow as the economy recovers. Join a panel of industry experts that will share their views from different corners of the market. More info here.
> 3/9 to 3/11—NESEA's BuildingEnergy Conference (Boston, MA). Generating truly new ideas in the world of sustainability requires whole systems thinking, a cross-disciplinary approach, and rigorous standards for content and case studies. Find all this and more at NESEA's BuildingEnergy Conference March 9-11, 2010, at the Seaport World Trade Center in Boston, MA. BuildingEnergy is the only conference where architects, designers, planners, builders, policymakers, manufacturers, and installers work together to determine what's possible. This year's theme: Reduce, Retrofit, and Renew. Conference sessions range from emerging trends in renewable energy to deep energy retrofits of commercial and residential buildings. The Trade Show features 160 exhibitors with the next generation of sustainable technologies and products. Register on line at www.nesea.org/buildingenergy.
> Ongoing—WATER: H2O = LIFE (New York City). Examine the most vital liquid on Earth through a series of exhibits at the American Museum of Natural History.
> E-mail us to list your event here


RESOURCES
> New Jersey & CompanyBusiness & Green news
> NYIncBusiness & Green news
> NY House MagazineGreen Real Estate
> The Daily GreenThe consumer's guide to green
> Green Inc. Blog — NYTimes.comEnergy and Green Business

GREEN NEWS SOURCES
> Alternative Energy News
> Climate Biz
> Climate Change News Digest
> Environmental News Network
> Global Climate Change from BBC News
> Green Business News
> GreenBiz.com
> Green Tech from CNET
> Greener Choices from Consumer Reports
> Greentech Media
> Greenwire
> Point Carbon
> Renewable Energy World
> Yale Environment 360
> Washington Post: Green Science. Policy. Living

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