Houses of 2020 will be all about energy
Apr 22 - USA TODAY
The American house of 2020 will likely be smaller, smarter, more urban
and efficient.
It might not look like a space-age Jetsons set, but just as iPhones and
Google have revolutionized personal computing, technology will boost
home IQ.
More houses will have energy meters that track power usage and program
appliances to run when electric rates are lowest.
Houses also will waste less energy because they'll have better
insulation and windows.
The house of the future will be built significantly "tighter,"
says Nate Kredich of the U.S. Green Building Council.
Builders already are including basic features such as programmable
thermostats, found a January survey by the National Association of Home
Builders. "It's not rocket science, but it helps control energy costs,"
says NAHB's Stephen Mellmen. "Affordability is driving these decisions."
Perhaps the most obvious change will be home size. Of builders surveyed,
96% plan to build smaller. The trend began with upscale buyers before
the recession and has intensified, says Kermit Baker of Harvard
University's Joint Center for Housing Studies.
A new single-family U.S. house averaged 2,373 square feet last year,
down from 2,507 in 2007, according to Census Bureau data.
Production builders such as Pulte are reducing the average size of their
new models and offering more eco-features such as solar panels. KB Homes
is now offering pre-wiring for electric vehicle charging stations.
A decade ago, Kredich says, low VOC (volatile organic compound) house
paints were pricey, but costs have come down.
"We can expect to see the same phenomenon in categories such as
photovoltaic (solar) technology where costs to date have been largely
prohibitive," he says.
Alex Wilson, executive editor of BuildingGreen, a Vermont-based company
that publishes books and an online newsletter, expects lower prices and
improved performance to make solar water heaters and rooftop panels
"very common" by 2020, used in at least 30% of new houses. Other changes
he sees:
*Smart growth. More houses and apartments will be built in areas close
to public transit, walkways and bike paths.
The Environmental Protection Agency says house-building permits more
than doubled since 2000 in the downtowns and close-in suburbs of 26 of
the nation's largest metro areas.
*LED lighting. This will gain market share but is still costlier than
compact fluorescent.
*Ductless heating. Geothermal heat pumps will be replaced by lower-cost,
ductless "mini-split" air-source heat pumps, predicts Wilson. He says
ductless technology is improving, and while most manufacturers are now
Japanese, more U.S. firms will move into the market.
*Efficient windows. Triple-glazed, low-emissive windows will become
common, accounting for up to a third of sales in colder climates. It
also will become common to "tune" windows, Wilson says, by using
different glass on a home's south side than on its east or west.
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