Blogs > Michael Strong > March 2010

Time to Plan Your Trip to Raleigh!

Cool! I can’t wait to go there! I’ve spent all sorts of time the last several weekends poking, planning and probing the upcoming conference and at the risk of sounding like a salesman for the show I can’t wait to go! I mean seriously what’s not to like about getting away from my business for a couple of days to work on my business. There will be world class smart folks there to network with, product manufacturers and booths to visit, I’m hoping to check out the home tour and see some of Raleigh. Probably even going to run ½ marathon on Sunday between events!

And just so you know, I am not a salesperson for the show. I sit on no show committees and I get paid nothing for this effort to encourage you to meet me there. In fact, I am so determined to meet as many of you there as possible I am publishing my schedule below for you to see. Drop me an email if want to get together. Let me know if you can’t go and I will do my best to talk you into changing your mind! But here it is!


Friday 14th
Instructing Day 1 Green Building for Building Professionals from 9-5
Dinner with my wife afterwards

If you have not taken this class, take it! It’s great and I guarantee you that you will be glad you did!

Saturday 15th
Day 2 Instructing Green Building for Building Professional from 9-5
Dinner with my wife


Sunday 16th

1. ½ marathon in Cary, NC Got to have a little fun right?!
2. 4pm Opening General Session & Keynote I hope. Keynote in 2008 was awesome! I’m hoping this years is better than last years!
3. 5:30pm Welcome reception. Can’t wait to bring my wife and rub elbows with the big wigs! They will all be there and they will all be very accessible! Great place for you to meet the folks you read about each month!

Monday 17th
1.
8am Breakfast in Exhibit hall. Even a vegetarian like me can’t pass up a free breakfast!
2. 9am Economics of Green Homes
3. 10:45am Green Appraisals & Lending. I’m assuming this is not an oxymoron
4. 12 noon Lunch in Exhibit hall. Who says there’s no such thing as a free lunch?
5. 3:15pm Cost Effective Green Practices or How to Mkt & Sell High Performance Homes. Not sure which one just yet. I’ll probably wait to see who is instructing them before deciding.
6. 4:30pm Marketing to the New Green Consumer

Tuesday 18th
1.
8 am Breakfast in Exhibit hall
2. 10:15am Builder Challenge maybe if I can figure what it is?
3. 12 noon Market Value Studies for sure! Should be the highlight of the week I hope!

Bear in mine I’m a madly in love newlywed so my schedule will not have the flexibility it appears. In other words-no promises yet! But if you really are thinking about going then get to www.nahbgreen.com to put your schedule together. I hope to see you in Raleigh!

Posted: 3/31/2010 10:55:00 AM by Michael Strong | with 0 comments



Green Air is Clean Air: Part 4 of 4

Separating ourselves from air pollutants is the next step we can take to improve the indoor air quality in our homes. Whether remodeling a home, building new or just content to stay where you are at, these steps are easy and pretty inexpensive. As you know from previous blogs they are in sequential order: Eliminate, Separate, Filtrate and Ventilate. And since a truly high performance green home is not just energy efficient but also healthy, it just makes sense for us to learn how to implement these practices if we want to live in a modern home. Let us now discuss Separation and Ventilation, the 2nd and 3rd steps in improving our indoor air quality.

Gasoline and oil, paints, paint thinners and pool, lawn and garden chemicals are some of the many chemicals in our lives we choose not to live without. Hence our goal is to separate ourselves from these chemicals wherever possible. Those means storing them in the garage or if you are building a new home, build it with a detached garage. In some cases building a storage shed is an even better solution to reduce our exposure. Because you are separated from them and not sharing the nearby dangerous air, you can live safely with the knowledge your clients will not be breathing these harmful air pollutants.

But if the garage is attached to the home, you clearly cannot separate them from each other. In this case you have to completely air seal the common wall and attic between the house and garage. That can usually be accomplished with caulks and foam sealants but in some cases you may actually need a carpenter to get into the attic and frame the space closed. This by the way, is not just a good means of preventing the pollutants from enter the house it is a critical fire safety feature which can slow down a garage fire trying to enter the home.

Regardless of whether the garage is detached or attached, ventilating polluted air is the next step in improving your indoor air quality. In the garage, simply install a solar powered ventilation fan that operates on a timer and sensor which is triggered by a car entering the garage. That will ensure the nasty fumes in the garage are regularly vented out and away from the house. Since it doesn’t use energy to operate and shuts off automatically this is really tough to be beat!

Because our cooking, cleaning, bathing and washing activities all increase the moisture level in our homes to levels not considered healthy we also need to learn how to properly ventilate our bathrooms and kitchen. That simply entails installing ventilation fans in these areas and ducting through the attic and out the roof. When buying a ventilation fan consider the following:
  • An Energy Star rated fan will use less energy and have a noise rating so that it doesn’t disturb your next dinner party!
  • Make sure the fan is properly sized for the size area it is ventilating because each fan has different capacities.
  • Put your fans on timers or humidistats that will automatically turn them off or on

Consider these discussion tips with your next client::
  • Add a fan to the laundry room. After all, with laundry detergent, cleaning supplies, pet food, litter boxes and wet and dirty clothes there is likely no other room that needs venting more than our laundry rooms!
  • If the budget allows, adding a central vacuum system will make an unbelievable difference in reducing dust levels in your home when you clean.
  • If you are replacing floors then install hard surfaces instead carpet which can be a big dust collector.
  • Let them know you will take these basic safeguards during construction: 1. regularly change out the return air filters, 2. seal off the supply registers in the work areas and 3. Continuously operate temporary fans to blow the construction air outside the home.
  • Recommend higher quality windows-they have lower air infiltration leakage ratings (not to mention they are more energy efficient)

In the next and final blog of our “Green Air is Clean Air” series you will learn the 4th and final step required to safeguard the air you and your family breathe in your home today.

To visit our next green certified home under construction or to answer your questions on how to improve your family’s indoor air quality you can contact me at Michael@GreenHausBuilders.com

Posted: 3/9/2010 12:46:27 PM by Michael Strong | with 0 comments



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About Me

Michael is currently the President of GreenHaus Builders and Brothers Strong, Inc. Brothers Strong is a nationally recognized residential remodeling firm and GreenHaus Builders specializes in the construction of LEED Homes: from high end custom to affordable multi-family. GreenHaus Builders built Houston’s first LEED home (Gold) and will be breaking ground and another LEED/ANSI home in Q1 2010. Michael has served on the H.U.D. Partnership for Advancing Technology in Housing committee since 2001 and is a frequent speaker around the country on green building and remodeling issues.  Named NAHB's Green Remodeling Advocate of the Year in 2008, he has an MBA from the Monterey Institute of International Studies in Monterey, CA; an MA from Southwest Texas State University; and a BA from the University of Texas in Austin.

You will find Michael co-hosting the "Home Improvement Hotline” Radio Show on KPRC 950 AM (since 2005), as well as co-instructing "Green Houses: Building or Remodeling Your Dream Green Home" at Rice University School of Continuing Studies (since 2008).

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