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  Photograph copyright 2006 Edward Caldwell

Feature: Green Living

Joanne Furio

November 1, 2006

In the 1960s and ’70s, “green” homes were often synonymous with earth-berm buildings and funky structures covered in nascent solar panels. Aesthetics, it seemed, were not part of the equation.

Fortunately, that is no longer the case. The ensuing decades have greatly improved the appearance of green homes, while tremendous leaps in technology have made them as functional and luxurious as traditionally built houses. There is even a term to describe the current wave of green building: “second-generation ecological design.”

Arkin Tilt Architects
“We’re really integrating everything we’ve learned from the early experiments and putting those things together in appealing ways,” says David Arkin, whose Berkeley-based firm, Arkin Tilt Architects, is a leader in eco-conscious architecture. “In our minds, it’s not green design, it’s good design, the way all buildings should be created.” Arkin’s approach—and his expertise in solar energy—made him the architect of choice for Suzanne Johnson, a board member of Sunrise Sustainability Resources Group in Reno, Nev., which advocates sustainability and renewable energy.


The main stairwell. Photograph copyright 2006 Edward Caldwell. (Click image to enlarge)


“I set out to show that you can do a solar home and it doesn’t need to look the way it did back in the ’70s,” Johnson explains. Arkin’s design for her 3,500-square-foot home in Gardnerville, Nev., in the Eastern Sierra, has earned kudos for its bold design and innovative green-building techniques.

The house incorporates virtually all aspects of green architecture: solar power to generate electricity, heat and hot water; highly insulating straw-bale construction and sod roofing; recycled materials used in clever, new ways; less toxic building materials; and radiant heat, considered a more efficient, energy-saving method. The home has no air-conditioning, yet remains a comfortable 76 degrees during a heat wave.


The architects employed non-toxic materials for the living spaces. Photograph copyright 2006 Edward Caldwell. (Click image to enlarge)


At first glance, the house appears to be traditionally powered, though contemporary in style. With its dramatic peaked roofs, deep overhangs with exposed rafters and large expanses of glass, the structure juts out of the landscape much like the Sierra Nevada beyond.

“The character really grows out of a careful study of the climate and the site and reacts to being against the mountains,” Arkin observes. “It’s a modern design that’s rooted in its place.”

The guesthouse and garage were tucked into the landscape. Their roofs are covered by part of a sagebrush meadow, providing natural insulation.

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