Tag Archives: Westport Green Task Force

Here Comes The Sun? Ed Paul Is Not So Sure.

This morning’s “06880” post involved energy costs. This one does too — specifically, solar.

Solar energy is getting plenty of press. His curiosity piqued, alert “06880” reader Ed Paul signed up with Westport’s Green Task Force. He wanted to learn about installing solar panels at his house.

A company called Astrum provided a proposal. Ed was stunned at the cost: over $51,000 — after rebates and incentives.

Based on his current CL&P bill, the system would save about $3,500 a year. At that rate, it would take over 14 years just to break even.

And, Ed notes, “it seems that solar panels have a limited life span. They start to lose efficiency after 10 or 15 years.”

This Westport home was retrofitted with a 5 kW solar system using 225 watt solar panels. It won an award -- but is it cost-efficient? (Photo courtesy of SunPower)

This Westport home was retrofitted with a 5 kW solar system using 225 watt solar panels. It won an award — but is it cost-efficient? (Photo courtesy of SunPower)

He wonders if his situation is unique. He’d like to hear from other “06880” readers. If you’ve gone solar, did you do it save money? Or was it simply an environmental-based decision?

“I’d love feedback from solar users on their experiences and cost savings,” Ed says.

Click “Comments” to share your thoughts. And — in the spirit of sunshine and openness — please use your full, real names.

Putting The Heat On Westport Homes

What good is owning a home if you can’t compare it to your neighbors’?

Number of rooms. Height of the roof. Size of the backyard swing set. If we can measure it, we can win it.

Well, here’s a new metric: thermal imaging.

Starting today — thanks to a partnership between Sagewell and the Westport Green Task Force — you can find out how much heat is leaking from your house, compared to others like it.

If you live in a super-energy-efficient house — damn, no one will know.

But if yours does a better job heating the great outdoors than you — you can do something about it. Like, fix it.

The right side of the house above has had work done to prevent energy loss. The left side shows where it all goes.

The right side of the house above has had work done to prevent energy loss. The left side shows where it all goes.

Sagewell — a 5-year-old company that designs energy efficiency programs — has already worked with 40 towns in their home state of Massachusetts. Now they’re expanding to Connecticut.

A dozen communities applied for Sagewell’s initial program. Four — including Westport — were accepted.

“We have a very environmentally conscious community,” Green Task Force chair David Mann says. “It’s well organized, and people are active.”

That attracted Sagewell, says CEO Pasi Miettinen.

His program uses Google Maps-type vehicles. Driving through town on cold winter nights, they collect heat-loss data via thermal imaging.

When a homeowner requests a report, the data on that house is prepared.

A typical Sagewell report.

A typical Sagewell report. The right side describes heat loss via insulation, windows and doors.

Sagewell mapped Westport last month (and it was cold). They got about 90 percent of all houses. Those obscured by hedges or fences, more than 70 feet from the road, and condos were not mapped.

Once you see how much heat roars through your walls, you can request an in-home assessment, and consultations (including insulation, upgrading heating or air conditioning systems, new windows and solar options) from Sagewell partners. Sagewell offers email and phone help throughout the process.

The next step is taking advantage of energy efficiency measures. Some are state-subsidized, like a Home Energy Solutions visit that offers various options, rebates, incentives and financing. (Free energy efficiency measures are offered on an income-eligible basis.) Sagewell offers lists of local contractors, too.

Another option: Astrum Solar will provide solar photovoltaic for Westporters, at a discounted price. (Contracts must be signed by May 1.)

Thermal imaging is free to customers. Sagewell — a for-profit company — earns fees for referrals, and through marketing agreements.

Miggs Burroughs designed the very clever front of this informational postcard. Look for it in your mail soon.

Miggs Burroughs designed the very clever front of this informational postcard. Look for it in your mail soon.

In Belmont, Massachusetts, more than 20% of all eligible homeowners took advantage of Sagewell’s thermal imaging. (One resident who apparently passed: Mitt Romney.)

Cheshire — one of the other 3 Connecticut towns involved — has already seen over 200 homeowners participate.

Mann notes that in the past 3 years approximately 15 percent of Westport homes have been weatherized, thanks to CL&P’s Home Energy Challenge. But, he says, much more can be done.

Thermal imaging is not sexy — or visible. However, it can be very cost-efficient. And with the money you save on energy, you can build a higher fence. Add another bay to your garage. Construct an addition to your child’s treehouse.

You know — the things everyone can see.

(To participate in the program, or for more information, click here or call 203-349-3019. An informational workshop is set for Thursday, February 27, 6:30 p.m. at Earthplace.)

We’re Also #1

On the heels of this morning’s postWestport is the 9th most educated place in the United States! — it’s worth noting another accomplishment.

In the Neighbor to Neighbor Home Energy Challenge, we’re #1.

And we did not win by a nose (or kilowatt, or whatever). We blew every other town in Connecticut far out of the water.

Home energy challengeWe ended the contest with 819,400 points. Our next closest competitor — Wilton — earned 170,800. Only 4 other towns in the state (Ridgefield, Wethersfield, Portland and Lebanon) got over 100,000.

Westport’s spectacular energy efficiency rating comes thanks to the work done by the Westport Home Energy Challenge, and 20 partner organizations.

But we’re not resting on our laurels. The Green Task Force has launched a “Stay Cool Westport!” initiative.

Anyone signing up for a Home Energy Solutions visit will learn how to lower air-conditioning and heating costs. And — if it’s done by August 31 — donations will be made to the Westport Warm-Up Fund. That’s a Department of Human Services program that helps needy Westporters purchase heating fuel.

Congratulations to the 1,548 Westporters who have already weatherized their homes through the Neighbor to Neighbor Challenge. Your “energy” is greatly appreciated.

(To sign up for a Stay Cool Westport energy audit, call 877-WISE-USE.)

Club Green Wants Your Roof

Most Westporters are so busy they have little time for basic daily functions like cooking, cleaning and breathing.

So they certainly don’t have time to figure out if their home has good solar potential.

Even if Solarize Westport — a fantastic program that promotes solar installation at below-market rates — is closing in on its December 14 deadline.

So a dozen Staples students are doing it for you.

High school teenagers don’t have a lot of free time either. But these are members of Club Green — a very active environmental group — and helping the planet (and their town) is at least as important to them as homework, SAT prep and playing FIFA.

So last week they examined aerial photos from Google Earth. They found 53 local homes with southern-facing, well-oriented roofs. Then they hand-addressed envelopes to the owners, mailing a letter and flyer describing Solarize Westport.

Club Green — including Robby Gershowitz and Zack Pensak, Stapleites who also serve on Westport’s Green Task Force — says there are 250 or so homes in Westport with “ideal” south-facing roof orientation. Many others are “good” — not due-south, but close enough.

Club Green members (from left) Robby Gershowitz, Thomas Ward and Sarah Fox work diligently to find south-facing roofs.

Club members will continue their identification and mailing work this Tuesday (November 20, 5 to 7 p.m., Town Hall Room 309).

Anyone interested —  any age — can join them. Just bring a pen, smartphone, iPad or laptop.

The pizza is free.

Solar power is not, of course. But it’s a great investment — particularly if you heed Club Green, and sign up with Solarize Westport.

3,800 Square Feet, No Furnace — It’s The Toastiest Home In Town

When you or I buy a house, we think about things like location, driveway, number of bathrooms and if the kitchen needs updating.

Doug Mcdonald considers solar orientation, air tightness, thermal bridging and ventilation.

Which is why he and his family live in a Westport home that is constantly 73 degrees, with spectacular air quality — but no air conditioner, furnace o4 central heating system. The Mcdonalds pay nothing for gas, oil or propane.

Oh, yeah: 20% of the heat is generated by the house’s appliances — and occupants.

In 2010 Doug — whose profession is real estate — was looking for land to build on. Google Maps shows available real estate — who knew? — so he drove around Westport, and found property on Roseville Road.

The house Doug Mcdonald bought -- formerly owned by Oscar Levant.

It was the 1930s home of Oscar Levant, the pianist, composer, author, comedian and actor. Designed by architect Barry Byrne — a disciple of Frank Lloyd Wright — it was solid concrete.

It had also been vacant — and listed — for 3 years.

The simplified shape appealed to Doug. Walking through, he realized he had to remove only 2 walls to achieve a modern floor plan.

It was a perfect place to put into practice all the ideas he’d learned from the Passivhaus Institute. The German-based organization has developed rigorous standards for constructing “hyper-green” structures.

The Levant house faced south. It sat high on a hill. The concrete construction meant high “thermal mass” (material that absorbs heat from a heat source, then releases it slowly).

Doug created an “air balloon” inside. He made sure nothing on the building touched from the outside to the inside — including the windows. (A chimney, by contrast, is a classic thermal bridge. It touches the earth in the basement, runs through a house, then touches the sky. Doug blocked the chimney, using what he calls “nuclear grade” insulation: recycled glass infused with air.) The interior “absorbs” everything from the outside.

Panels on the roof drop heat energy into a solar tank in the basement. That provides all the hot water the Mcdonalds need — plus radiant floor heating.

“I use the sun like a reptile on a rock,” he says. “Right now, the house is sucking it up. Later tonight it will ooze through the building.”

Fresh oxygen is pushed through the house at all times. An energy recovery ventilator — Doug calls it a “magic box” — ensures that fresh air coming into the house exchanges its temperature and humidity with the air that’s leaving. Ceiling vent heads in every room ensure a constant 73 degree, 45% relative humidity environment.

Doug Mcdonald in his living room. Note that the windows do not touch the inside of his home.

The house is “incredibly cost effective,” Doug says. His electric bill is about $120 a month. At 4,000 square feet, it uses 90 percent less energy than a typical home.

Just as importantly, “our quality of life is incredible. Once you sleep in a passive house, you never want to go back. You wake up with the best sleep ever, because the air is incredibly oxygenated.”

Yet there aren’t too many passive houses around here. Or anywhere in the US, for that matter.

Right now, Doug says, there are 3 main advocates of passive housing: “very wealthy Europeans, Habitat for Humanity, and the military.”

The what?

“The less diesel fuel needed to air condition and heat troops, the better,” Doug explains.

Doug Mcdonald's home, after retrofitting into a passive house.

But the stock of concrete houses available to convert to passive housing is minuscule, right?

“I could build a center-staircase Colonial to Passive House Institute standards,” he says. In fact, he’d like to.

“A passive house doesn’t have to look like a UFO,” Doug notes. “It can look like anything. There’s no big trick to this. It’s really simple — just done to an extreme level.”

However, he admits, “this is not a do-it-yourself project. You have to understand construction, and have zero tolerance for any mistakes. This is like building an F2 race car — not a go-kart.”

Earlier this month, the Connecticut Neighbor to Neighbor Energy Challenge and Westport’s Green Task Force sponsored 4 tours of the Mcdonalds’ home. Dozens of interested residents trooped through the house. They marveled at the “magic box,” admired the “air balloon,” and breathed the high-quality air.

And despite the constant opening and closing of doors, the temperature inside remained a very comfortable 73 degrees.

Alan Abramson’s Energy

When the oil embargo hit in the 1970s, Alan Abramson was energized by environmental awareness.  But he was just starting his career as a bond trader; he was just married, had his 1st kid — you know how it goes.

But Alan never stopped wondering why America used its resources so inefficiently.  And he could not understand why we bought so many resources from our enemies.

Alan Abramson

Alan, his wife Lynn and their young family moved to Westport 20 years ago.  “It’s the best thing we ever did,” he says.  “We absolutely love the community.”  He had a successful career in bonds — but he never truly loved the industry.

In 2007 hooked back up with his alma mater.  Duke’s online master’s program in environmental management was aimed at environmental professionals.  Alan wasn’t one — but as an expert in market-based solutions, he was in.

“It was a great experience,” he says.  He graduated in May 2009 — a horrible time to look for a new job, let alone change careers.   But Duke’s Nicholas Institute for Environmental Policy Solutions needed a carbon markets fellow, so 2 months later Alan moved to Durham for a year.

Lynn stayed here.  She was attending Columbia University’s Teachers College — getting a master’s in English education.

“People on Wall Street think they’re the smartest people on the planet,” Alan says.  “Well, there’s incredible talent in academia too.  And the energy level there was like being on the bond trading floor.”

When his year was up, Alan returned to Westport.  Soon, Gordon Joseloff asked him to co-chair the 1st selectman’s Green Task Force.  Simultaneously, Dan Levinson asked Alan to co-chair a Green Village Initiative to help local homeowners become more energy efficient.

At Duke, Alan had become intrigued by the low rates at which people take steps to reduce energy consumption.  A result of his interest is a survey currently making its way around town.  The questions are designed to understand local knowledge and interest in home energy efficiency measures.  (Click here to take the survey.)

After the results are tabulated, GVI will organize a focus group to find out how best to market energy efficiency to  Westport.  Alan knows energy efficiency is not a long-term solution — as a recent New Yorker story pointed out, the more efficient energy usage becomes, the more energy is used — but he calls it “a bridge to the eventual answer.”

An energy analysis unearths plenty of information about heat loss.

As environmentally aware as this town is, there are still obstacles to more efficient energy usage.  Many homeowners don’t realize, for example, that a CL&P Home Energy Solutions analysis costs just $75 with co-pay — and that we pay for the audit program anyway, through a utility bill charge.

We don’t have a lot of time to pursue energy efficiency solutions.  And although a 10% reduction in energy bills sounds nice, for many Westporters the actual dollar amount is not significant for many.

“The key is to get lots of people to do it,” Alan says.  “Then the reductions in use would be enormous.  And the payoff for the community would be huge.”

Surprisingly, Alan is “not a big advocate of ‘green’ and ‘sustainable.’  I think those words have been marketed very poorly.”  He is no marketing expert — but he knows there are plenty of Westporters with expertise in that field, who can help market the energy efficiency cause.

“It’s important for people to be aware of their consumption habits,” he says.  “We’re a consumer society, and we measure our success based on GDP.  Our perception is that consumption equals lifestyle.

“We have to find other ways to measure success.”