Sustainable Living

Banggerahan-inspired window

Green Design and Architecture

My dad is the rah-rah boy for the banggerahan, a window and sink extension common in traditional Pinoy kitchens, and he asked for a banggerahan-inspired window to be installed in our Tagaytay house:

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It comes in handy for displaying planters, or just for good old ventilation, similar to horizontal ventanillas we saw in Treveia\’s green home:

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These vents let air through from the outside:

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Ingenious modernization of tried and tested Pinoy architecture!

Azkals surpise in Nuvali

Life in Nuvali Philippines,

I had no idea the Azkals were going to be in Nuvali to launch Solenad 2 last Saturday.

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As luck would have it, we dropped by just in time for the meet and greet with the boys. Apparently the first forty people to register at Solenad 2 Main Activity Area were given the chance to get their pictures taken with Aly Borromeo and Anton Del Rosario.

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\"Azkals

Since high school I\’d hear Aly\’s name from my younger brothers who were friends with him in La Salle. Even back then he seemed to be dead serious about soccer. Nice to see him all grown up, a rising celebrity at that.

This was the second time I got to see the Azkals in Nuvali–the first was for a Venare event in the Treveia clubhouse earlier this year (saw the Younghusband brothers). I\’m way beyond the fangirl age, but what can I say, football is football and I\’ll always be a fan.  🙂

What’s open in Solenad 2?

Life in Nuvali Philippines, ,
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We were in Nuvali last Saturday and chanced upon the opening of Solenad 2, Ayala’s second retail area in Sta. Rosa, Laguna.  This new development gives Nuvali an additional leasable area of 10, 670 square meters for food and non-food establishments.

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It was drizzling so we just went for a quick drive around the area to get a feel of the place.

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First to greet us were sports shop and shoe outlets.  Curiously, some of these shops are also located in Paseo de Sta. Rosa just a few minutes away.

Let’s build affordable Philippine green homes!

Green Design and Architecture

When I first read about the Postgreen Homes in Philadelphia on Dwell.com, I got excited because their prototype, the 100K House, looked almost exactly like the dream green home I had in mind for my Avida Settings Nuvali home.

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When I looked through their other projects, I got even more excited because these people behind Postgreen–the Ludemans–were already doing (in Philadelphia) what I wanted to do here in the Philippines:  build beautiful, true green homes that were affordable to the middle class.  

The Dwell article referred to the Ludemans as “citizen developers” and I love love love that.  When I was researching about green housing projects for inspiration last year, I came across intentional communities and how variants were coming about left and right.

One interesting version had the people come together first–think of one person teaming up with another to attract even more like-minded people.  They form the neighborhood association and draw up their dream community, and they get specific: where, how big, who, how, what.  Once they gather enough numbers, they property hunt together, and then build the physical community: the roads, permits, subdivisions of the lot, the master plan, etc.

I turned to my dad astounded that such a way of residential development actually existed, but he wasn\’t so sure it would work in the Philippines.  We are, for the most part, loyal only to our families.  The concept of community is weak in the Philippines, or at the very least, it is young.

The Postgreen system is unique in the sense that it doesn\’t aspire for a separate green community.  It builds its green homes in the here and now, fully integrated into existing neighborhoods in the residential districts of Philadelphia.

When I browsed through the other Postgreen Homes on their website, what I found extra interesting was how they built up and improved on the green features of their projects over time:

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This one has a third floor and yes, a roofdeck!

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The Avant Garage goes beyond the roof deck and includes a green roof:

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Summary of features of Postgreen houses:

  • Solar Thermal
  • Solar PV
  • Passive House Air Sealing
  • Solatube Daylighting
  • Super Insulated
  • Air-to-Air Heat Pump
  • Heat Pump Water Heater
  • Dual Flush Toilet
  • Energy Monitoring
  • Energy Recovery Ventilator (ERV) <— aka HRV?
  • Rain Collection
  • Triple-Pane Windows
  • Energy Star Appliances
  • Low Flow fixtures
  • Low VOC Finishes/Paints
  • Double Stud Wall
  • Green Roof
  • Roof deck
  • Private Yard
  • Full Basement

I want to do this here, in Manila if able, because it’s where it’s most needed!  Will research which of these design features are applicable (also necessary) to affordable Philippine green housing.

In Avida Settings Nuvali, the only green requirement to build is the dual piping system, which was much of a let down for me. I hoped for more green suggestions from the developer at the very least, if not green requirements.  My own experience in having to fight for my green roof made me realize that although Ayala deserves accolades for initiating the country’s first large scale eco-community project, there is still much to learn and adjust in making this vision of a green community real… And as pioneer residents and stakeholders of Nuvali, that task falls on our shoulders as much as it does on Ayala as developer.

Affordable Green housing for $100k

Green Design and Architecture
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The goal: to build small, sustainable houses at reasonable prices right in the middle of the city, with easy transit access.

Who\’s doing it?  Postgreen Homes in Philadelphia!

Developers Chad Ludeman and his wife Courtney, shown in the picture with their son, built the $100K House (about Php4.2M) in 2009 as their prototype Postgreen Home in East Kensington, Philadelphia:

The 100k House project is our first and most well known project. Designed as a case study for building affordable LEED homes, these two houses have come to represent our ongoing efforts to build better homes for less. Both homes received LEED Platinum certification and the project won the USGBC LEED for Homes Project of the Year Award

The 100K house is about 111 square meters in area (1,200 sq ft), has two bedrooms and one bath.  Green features are as follows:

DISTANCE TO BUS: 2 Blocks
DISTANCE TO TRAIN: 4 Blocks

AMENITIES / DETAILS

  • Solar Thermal
  • Solar PV
  • Passive House Air Sealing
  • Super Insulated
  • Solatube Daylighting
  • Private Yard
  • Full Basement
  • Air-to-Air Heat Pump
  • Dual Flush Toilet

The pictures tugged at my heart because they\’re almost exactly what I had in mind for my Nuvali house: concrete floors, open plan design, flexi rooms!  

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Look at these bicycle hooks under the stairs– great way to combine form and function, which I think is at the core of green design.

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The house is green through and through, from pricing, to construction cost and materials, to design and energy needs:

The 100K House is close to 70 percent more energy efficient than the older properties next door, thanks to heavy-duty insulation, tight-fitting windows.

I especially like the emphasis on the lifestyle shift that the Ludemans insist on when one decides to go green.  More than anything, it is a paring down, a return to simplicity:

…for average working people to embrace Postgreen’s ethos, they must take Phillips’s ideas about accepting less to heart. The Ludemans’ home consists of two floors, the first little more than a concrete-floored rectangle housing a living space and the kitchen. Upstairs is Chad and Courtney’s modest bedroom, a small room for their son, Teague, and a bathroom that boasts the only door in the house. Bikes hang in plain view beneath the stairs; a small island with an induction cooktop separates the kitchen from the living space.

The home’s furnishings and fixtures are equally humble. A row of bare CFLs hangs from the ceiling of the living area, and the appliances in the kitchen are sturdy, efficient fare from Frigidaire. 

More on the other Postgreen homes later.

Found via Dwell.com
Images from Dwell
Read more on Postgreenhomes.com

Now reading: Triumph of the City

Sustainable Living

Its subtitle reads: How Our Greatest Invention [i.e. Cities] Makes Us Richer, Smarter, Greener, Healthier, and Happier.

For pro-quiet, pro-space me, I was sincerely curious as to how cities could be greener than non-cities (i.e. how can Manila be greener than Nuvali? –> it\’s a stretch of a comparison, perhaps even inappropriate, but ultimately, we learn new things in order to apply them to our own situation: is the Philippine urban lifestyle potentially more environment-friendly and are we wrong to move away from it?).
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This book comes highly recommended by a friend, most especially now that I\’m moving away from the city.

I\’m only in the first two chapters, and despite the numbers backing the author\’s claims (btw, the book is by Edward Glaeser, a Harvard economics professor), I\’ve found my eyebrows raised a number of times already.  It\’s clear that he\’s an urbanite through and through, and I do think that there\’s no better person to defend the city than one who loves it.

But such a statement as \”We must stop idolizing home ownership, which favors suburban tract homes over high-rise apartments\” goes against something at my very core, and I\’m not sure it\’s something I can rally behind, even given the figures to back it up.

I\’m keeping an open mind though, especially since I agree with my whole heart with the book\’s core thesis: \”that ideas spread easily in dense environments,\” and that \”the strength that comes from human collaboration is the central truth behind civilization\’s success and the primary reason why cities exist.\”

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As an aside, do any of you use Kindle?

I got my new book in hardcopy for P1,200++ in Fully Booked (hardcover, boo–I\’m a paperback fan), plus had to reserve and wait for one month for it to arrive.  The long wait made me explore the idea of getting a Kindle, which they say increases one\’s reading volume by 300%.

Hardcopy on Amazon is $18+shipping, while the kindle auto-delivered version is $17: Triumph of the City: How Our Greatest Invention Makes Us Richer, Smarter, Greener, Healthier, and Happier\"\"

Any thoughts?

Coke puts up first plant billboard on EDSA

Green Design and Architecture

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COOL!

The 60 x 60 ft. plant billboard, located along Northbound EDSA-Forbes, utilizes a thriving species of Fukien tea plant, which absorbs air pollutants. According to botanist Anthony Gao, each plant can absorb up to 13 pounds of carbon dioxide in a year, on the average. \”This billboard helps alleviate air pollution within its proximate areas as it can absorb a total of 46,800 pounds of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, on estimate.\” Gao says.

What\’s the plant billboard made of?

  • 3,600 pots of recycled Coke bottles
  • potting mixture made up of industrial by-products and organic fertilizers (both stable and light-weight)
  • bottles designed to contain the plants securely and allow the plants to grow sideways
  • drip irrigation system operated on a schedule to distribute water with nutrients to the plants

Image and info from engadget

Go Green from manilarat

Sustainable Living

Sharing green posts from my days as manilarat!

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My favorites (i.e. the must reads):

Other Go Green posts:

Simplicity and nature

Sustainable Living

\”If you will stay close to nature, to its simplicity, to the small things hardly noticeable, those things can unexpectedly become great and immeasurable.\”
— Rainer Maria Rilke (Letters to a Young Poet)

Skyway to Nuvali

Life in Nuvali Philippines

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Just a tip–if you\’re taking the Skyway to Nuvali, make sure you stay on the right lane after you pass the Sucat exit. We once made the mistake of staying on the left and ended up in Alabang.

On another note, can\’t help but smile every time I pass the Skyway.

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If you\’re a first timer in Manila, and this skyway is what you see straight from the NAIA Terminal, you would be impressed.

A friend had a visitor from London who just mumbled in awe: \”I wasn\’t expecting this.\”

It\’s interesting to wonder what people do expect when they finally decide to visit our country for the first time; even balikbayan relatives get amazed by the skyscrapers and class AAA establishments we have in Fort and Makati.  It\’s not the general impression they get from all the news they see on TV–usually sad news focusing on how poor and left behind we are, kawawa naman ang Pilipinas.

It will do us much good–individually and also collectively–to explore what makes our country beautiful, to include them in our everyday conversations with friends, family, workmates and to rally behind these gems, as much as we rally behind efforts to change the ugly.