Synopses & Reviews
Is it possible for a group of the world’s most respected environmental scientists to truly practice what they preach? Can their expertise in climate change help them in transforming an old house and its nine acres into their new office building and campus—a building that is as energy efficient as possible, uses local materials, and generates all of the energy it consumes? In this candid, charming, and informative book, the director of the renowned Woods Hole Research Center tells a story that will interest anyone who has ever thought about doing a “green” rehab, has tried to build green, or just wonders what’s actually possible.
The Woods Hole Research Center is an international leader in identifying the causes and consequences of environmental change. When the WHRC needed a new administration building, its scientists and staff decided that the building should utilize “state-of-the-shelf” green building techniques and materials. However, the new office had to conform with the laws and building codes of the time, and with materials that were then available—no matter how frustrating these requirements were to the resident scientists and contractors.
The author, George M. Woodwell, founder of the WHRC, was intimately involved in the design and construction of the Gilman Ordway Campus, which was completed in 2003 in collaboration with McDonough + Partners. He details the challenges they faced, some of which are familiar to everyone who tries to “build green”: the vagaries of building codes, the whims of inspectors, the obstreperousness of subcontractors, the search for appropriate materials, and the surprises involved in turning an old house into a modern office building.
Woodwell puts the building in a larger context, not only within the work of the Center and the tradition of Woods Hole, but in the global need to minimize our carbon emissions and overall environmental impact. Building a world that works requires rethinking how we design, reuse, and live in the built environment while preserving the functional integrity of the landscape.
Review
"The Nature of a House is a candid, charming, and illuminating book. Woodwell tells a story that will interest anyone who has ever thought about doing a 'green' rehab, has tried to build green, or just wonders what is actually possible."
Review
andquot;The Nature of a House is a candid, charming, and illuminating book. Woodwell tells a story that will interest anyone who has ever thought about doing a and#39;greenand#39; rehab, has tried to build green, or just wonders what is actually possible.andquot;
Review
"The residential sector is responsible for 21% of U.S. carbon dioxide emissions, which are directly related to global climate change. Building green provides a dual benefit by significantly lessening the negative impact of a home on the environment, while also benefitting the occupants by saving them money, reducing resource usage, and improving their health. Green home building can help to drive these benefits, and The Nature of a House helps to educate consumers about the importance of green homebuilding while offering strategies and solutions, both big and small."
Review
"Nobody understands the connections between the global and the local better than George Woodwell. The Nature of a House is at once sobering and inspiring. It shows what can be done—what has to be done—to achieve true sustainability."
Synopsis
About the Author
Dr. George M. Woodwell is the founder of the Woods Hole Research Center. He was also the founder and director of the Ecosystems Center of the Marine Biological Laboratory in Woods Hole and a senior scientist at Brookhaven National Laboratory. He was a founding trustee of the Natural Resources Defense Council, a founding trustee of the World Resources Institute, a founder of the Environmental Defense Fund, and former president of the Ecological Society of America. Dr. Woodwell is the author of more than three hundred papers and books on ecology.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
Foreword \ William McDonough
Preface: A Small Matter of Habitat and Housing
Chapter 1. Building a World That Works
Chapter 2. Back to the Beginning: The Woods Hole Research Center
Chapter 3. Re-Designing Hilltop House: Triumphs and Compromises
Chapter 4. Energy in a New World
Chapter 5. Materials, Sewage and Costs: Adjusting Our Vision
Chapter 6. The Product: A Campus That Works and a World that Might
Index