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6.18.2010

Green Build Internet Special

Green Build Coupon
http://maps.google.com/coupons/page?oi=lbc&did=0_8497088984077998953&hl=en-US&gl=US


Provided by: Scott's Contracting
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http://www.stlouisrenewableenergy.blogspot.com
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15 Ways to Stay Cool & Save

With summers trending hotter and budgets getting tighter, it's tough to stay cool. Here's how to reduce your summer energy bills without breaking the bank.


Replace Your Windows

According to the EPA, Energy Star-qualified windows can save the typical household $125-$450 per year in energy costs when replacing single-pane windows and $25-$110 per year when replacing double-pane clear-glass windows.

What makes a window energy-efficient?

-- Improved frame materials such as wood composites, vinyl, and fiberglass reduce heat transfer and improve insulation.
-- Low-E glass with special coatings reflects infrared light, keeping out summer heat.
-- Gases between the panes, such as argon or krypton, insulate better than regular air.
-- Multiple panes of glass with air or gas in between insulate better than a single pane.
-- Warm-edge spacers keep a window's panes the correct distance apart to reduce heat flow and prevent condensation.


Parts 2-7 June 19,2010



The Solar Roadrunner

Feature
Highways basking in the hot sun are wasted energy. Scott Brusaw's solution? Make them out of solar panels

Scott Brusaw's Solar Roadways Kevin Hand

The road ahead is paved with photovoltaics. That's how Scott Brusaw sees it, anyway. His company, Solar Roadways, is embedding PV cells and LED lights into panels engineered to withstand the forces of traffic. The lights would allow for "smart" roadways and parking lots with changeable signage, while the cells would generate enough energy to power businesses, cities and, eventually, the entire country.

Each 12-by-12-foot Solar Roadway panel would produce about 7,600 watt-hours a day, based on an average of four hours of sunlight. At that rate, a one-mile stretch of four-lane highway could power about 500 homes. "If we could ever replace all the roads in the U.S., then, yeah, we would produce more electricity than we use as a nation," says Brusaw, an electrical engineer who completed his first prototype panel in February with funding from the U.S. Department of Transportation.

Brusaw's goal is to get the cost per panel under $10,000. That's roughly three times the cost of asphalt. But he wants to make panels that last three times longer than asphalt roads, which have to be resurfaced every 10 years in many places. "Then the cost is about the same," he says. "But that's just a break-even. We're also generating electricity."

The key to commercial viability will be the panels' glass. It must be textured for traction, embedded with heating elements for melting away ice and snow, and able to survive years of traffic. "The toughest is going to be that fast lane on the highway," Brusaw says, "where you've got a 40-ton truck, maybe with snow chains. It will have to be able to withstand all that." At the same time, it has to be self-cleaning if sunlight is to reach the PV cells; Brusaw points to experimental hydrophilic glass that uses sunlight to break down organic dirt, and rainwater to wash it away without streaking.

Next up for Solar Roadways will be qualifying for Phase II funding, a two-year, $750,000 deal to develop a commercial plan for the panels. At the end of those two years, Brusaw would like to be ready for testing in parking lots, which he sees as the perfect proving grounds for the lights and the power-generation system. Directional arrows and parking lines could be reconfigured to deal with busy times, and the electricity generated could feed adjacent businesses. "I talked to the guy in charge of power for Wal-Mart," Brusaw says. "Superstores are roughly 200,000 square feet, and parking lots are about four times that. I crunched the numbers for an 800,000-square-foot lot and told him how much power it could generate even if it was completely full of cars. It was 10 times the power they use."

Brusaw wants to start smaller, though—on the scale of, say, a fast-food restaurant. A McDonald's retrofitted with a solar parking lot could take itself largely or entirely off the grid or become a site for recharging electric vehicles (while the owners stopped inside for food, naturally). "Even the best electric cars have a range of about three hours," he explains. "But if all I have to do is find a McDonald's, I could drive from Idaho to the southern tip of Florida." Improbable? Yes. But "Billions of watts served" would be a cool new tagline.

The Lazy Environmentalist: No-Sweat Tips For Going Green

Get Paid to Save Money on Your Utility Bill
The My Emissions Exchange Web site challenges homeowners to conserve energy and calculates the equivalent amount of carbon emissions avoided. Reduce your electric bill by about $200, for instance, and you'll generate a carbon credit, which is equal to roughly one ton of carbon saved. My Emissions Exchange sells the credit on your behalf on the voluntary carbon market at a going rate of between $10 and $25, taking a 20 percent cut on all sales. The rest goes into your PayPal account.

Josh Dorfman is the author of The Lazy Environmentalist: Your Guide to Easy, Stly===ylish Green Living



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Scott's Contracting
scottscontracting@gmail.com
http://www.stlouisrenewableenergy.blogspot.com
http://www.stlouisrenewableenergy.com
scotty@stlouisrenewableenergy.com

Best And Worst Home Improvements For The Buck

Boosting a home's value is easier--and cheaper--than you might think

By Stephane Fitch, Forbes.comJun 17th, 2010

If you plan to sell your home in the next year, you're probably keen on finding a few ways to gin up its value. For many people that means donning an old pair of overalls, pulling out the power tools and going to work on some ambitious renovation projects.

Here's a smarter idea: Leave the work duds in the closet, the tools in the garage and the renovation plans on hold. Instead, get out a large trash can and a dust rag.

20 Best And Worst Home Improvements For The BuckWhere America's Money Is Moving

"Just clean up your act," says Chicago real estate agent Zack Sudler. "Put your junk in a storage locker, neaten, fix the wobbly ceiling fan--and do it before you call your Realtor."

An important point that many home sellers fail to realize: Their first sales job involves hiring a top-notch agent. Many of the best professional home sellers will shy away from putting a lot of time into selling your home if it's a mess.

The only home improvement Sudler recommends is painting. Even there, he advises limiting the work to covering blemishes and repainting any rooms that have overly bright or outdated colors.

On the bigger pre-sale improvement projects, real estate pros tend to have a fairly uniform view: They're rarely worth the money and effort. For most, the value added is a mere fraction of the cost.

To be sure, home renovations can have enormous benefits--to residents rather than sellers. Air conditioning or a new kitchen might dramatically improve your lifestyle. But the incremental amount a buyer will pay for a home after such projects are completed is likely to be well below the seller's cost.

"We've seen homes where sellers have contractors still toiling away when the open houses start," says Patrick Lashinsky, chief executive of San Francisco-based realty agency ZipRealty. "It's a nightmare."

The National Association of Realtors conducts an annual survey of its members in 80 cities that is created by Remodeling magazine and used to estimate the return on investment for 33 home improvement projects. The 2009 report concluded that, on average, for every $1,000 homeowners spend on projects, they get back $638.

Even projects normally hyped as sure bets for adding value generate surprisingly weak gains, NAR reports. Converting an attic into a bedroom, for example, is typically regarded as garnering interest among potential buyers who might have otherwise disqualified the home from their search. An extra bedroom will indeed add value--just not for the majority of people who spend on the conversion. NAR figures homeowners recoup $831 on average for every $1,000 they invest.

Kitchens and bathrooms remain two of the most popular upgrades, and do have among the best returns on remodeling investments. But even for these rooms, mid-range jobs, which offer the highest returns, yield only about $720 and $710, respectively, on average, for each $1,000 invested.

The only investment that tends to get more out of buyers than sellers put into it is a heavy, insulated steel entry door, according to the NAR/Remodeling survey. Spend $1,000 on such an upgrade and you're likely to add $1,289 to your sale price.

If you're looking for examples of ways to waste money on renovations, there are lots of choices. Remodeling a home office yields just $481 for every $1,000 invested. Buying a backup power generator (perhaps from the likes of Honda or Briggs & Stratton) will add only $589 for each $1,000 invested.

All this is anathema to retailers like Home Depot, Lowe's, Bed, Bath & Beyond, Williams-Sonoma and Lumber Liquidators. They all benefit from the myth that pumping money into your house pays off later on the auction block. So do buildings materials firms like Chicago-based USG, maker of the popular Sheetrock brand of gypsum wallboard.

Lashinsky says that on occasion, buying a new appliance for your home can pay off--if the one being replaced is so horribly out of date that it unsettles potential bidders. The agent has a long list of bad ideas to avoid. Among them: Converting a bedroom into a home office and yanking out the closet to make the room look bigger.

"In quite a few states, you're not allowed to list that as a bedroom anymore," he says. Such renovations can be expensive and result in the loss of bidders who need the extra bedroom.

Lashinsky's choice for all-time worst renovation: A family that tore out a long wooden stairway leading up to their lovely hillside home and replaced it with a newly paved path. They made the change right before putting the home on the block in mid-winter, and the path kept icing over.

"People who wanted to see the house literally couldn't get up the path," says Lashinsky. "They kept sliding back down every time they got near the place."

10 Best And Worst Home Improvements For The Buck

Best Improvement: Clean Up
Cost: Negligible
Give your home a top-to-bottom cleaning or, better yet, hire a pro to do a deep clean. Do it even before you hiring a real estate agent. If you don't have a regular cleaner, hire one to keep the place tidy until your house is sold.

Good Improvement: Simple Repairs
Cost: Negligible
It is well worth the modest cost to fix broken outlets, tiles, light switches, door latches, folding doors and ceiling fans. Buyers view such flaws as signs of deeper problems--and may lower their bids accordingly.

Good Improvement: Store Your Clutter
Cost: $100 a month
A 10-foot-by-10-foot locker at Public Storage or one of its competitors is likely to cost you less than your phone and cable bills. Move out unneeded dishes, linens, personal items and furniture. Try to empty closets. Your house will appear bigger and more valuable.

Good Improvement: Paint Exterior and Interior
Cost: $100 to $1,000
If the paint on the front of your house is peeling, scrape it and repaint. Indoors, cover up any blemishes and repaint any rooms in loud colors that may be off-putting to others.

Good Improvement: Tidy the Yard
Cost: $100 to $300
No need to break the bank here. Mow the lawn, weed the flowerbeds and pull any dying bushes. Plant flowers in bare spots.

Good Improvement: Replace Hardware
Cost: $300
It's a mistake to replace the kitchen cabinets or closet doors. But you can convince buyers to pay a little more by installing new handles, knobs and drawer pulls where needed.

Good Improvement: Replace Ugly Appliance
Cost: $500 to $1000
A new stainless steel range will not prompt buyers to pay much more for your home. But a seriously bedraggled stove or refrigerator could scare them off. If you've got a junky-looking appliance, swap it out for a budget-minded replacement.

Good Improvement: Steel Entry Door
Cost: Around $1,170
A heavy entry door comes with an impressive return: You're likely to get back your investment plus a 29% gain, according to the National Association of Realtors remodeling 2009 report.

Good Improvement: Roofing Credit
Cost: $19,700
If your roof leaks, offer the buyer a discount. It's likely to cost you less than the difference between what it'll cost you to replace the roof before selling and the lesser amount you'll recoup afterward. Source: National Association of Realtors/Remodeling.

Bad Improvement: Family Room Addition
Cost: $82,800
If you're itching to add a family room, do it for your family. Do not do it to profit from selling your home; you're likely to be disappointed. Source: National Association of Realtors/Remodeling.

Click here to see the full list of the Best And Worst Home Improvements For The Buck


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http://www.stlouisrenewableenergy.com
scotty@stlouisrenewableenergy.com

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