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Tag Archives: efficiency

Slow condo praised

A suite in Freed Developments’ 75 Portland has been lauded as a Slow Home

Tracy Hanes – Toronto Star

Charles Gane is proud to be slow.

Gane and Core Architects, the firm he’s a partner in, have been honoured by the Slow Home Project, which is surveying new residential design in nine North American cities. The best apartment/loft design in Toronto winner was a condo suite Gane designed for Freed Developments’, at 75 Portland Ave.

The findings were based on a survey of 588 new housing units in the GTA conducted by the Slow Home online community, with apartment/loft, townhouse and single detached homes categories; overall, 63% of new GTA residential projects fail to meet the minimum design quality threshold defined by a Slow Home test.

Slow Home, founded by Calgary architects John Brown (a professor of architecture at the University of Calgary) and Matthew North, is a social movement advocating for better designed houses (www.theslowhome.com). It was inspired by the slow food movement and is based on the belief that most mass produced houses and neighborhoods are like fast food — standardized, homogenized, and bad for people and the environment.

A slow home is defined as a place that is simple to live in, light on the environment, and benefits the lives of the people who reside in it.

After 20 years of “seeing really bad suburban design and helping hundreds of people find better places to live,” Brown developed the concept after his chef sister told him about slow food. He saw the parallels between food and housing production and says both are integral to people’s well being, and both industries have exploited basic human needs for marketing purposes.

“Houses are designed to be sold, not lived in, and the detailing of houses is designed to making them compelling to buy, just like a bag of Doritos,” says Brown. He says those “compelling” features include things like tiny, windowless dens in condos and cavernous foyers with tiny closets in detached homes, and don’t make for practical living.

He and North developed a website which educates visitors about good design, as well as offers critiques and invites comments on floor plans people submit.

For the survey, Brown and North invited their online community to scour the Internet for new home sale sites in the cities, evaluate floor plans based on the standardized Slow Home test, and submit their findings. People from around the globe participated.

“It’s been a crazy ride, trying to do nine cities in nine months,” says Brown.

Gane had never heard of the slow home movement until he learned he’d designed the condo/loft Toronto winner. The one-bedroom suite has no corridors, plenty of windows and a large balcony.

“It was a really unique design because of where it was in a courtyard,” says Gane. “It hit all the right buttons with them. We try to give every unit a measure of efficiency and try to provide a large living and dining area. This unit had 100% space utilization and it was wide and shallow. We just designed it to be a really nice living space.”

“This is a small residence but Core Architects created a very sensitive open plan configuration combined with a large amount of glazing to create a home that works really well,” says Brown. “This unit typifies the slow home philosophy of simplicity and lightness, and will be a great place in which to live.”

Seventy5 Portland is a 216-unit midrise condo building in the King West district. It scored 17 out of a possible 20 points on the slow home report card; the only area it didn’t make the grade on was natural light; “because it faces a courtyard, it doesn’t get a lot of sunlight,” says Gane.

The finishing touches are being put on the building, which has been painted bright white and “some people have palm trees out on their balconies, like they’re in Miami,” says Gane. “The building has a real hotel feel. We’re pretty happy with it.”

Ironically, slow home also did a survey in Miami and didn’t give out any awards in that city because the design quality was so poor, says Brown.

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Contact the Jeffrey Team for more information  -  416-388-1960

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Tiny homes are attracting the thrifty and the green

More people are deciding that a modest house is better for their quality of life than a mansion in the burbs

Craig Saunders – Globe and Mail

Sasha McIntyre lives in a house smaller than some suburban living rooms. And she loves it.

The Toronto animator shares a 480-square-foot house in eastern Toronto with her husband, John Lei.

Open the front door and you walk not into a vestibule, but the couple’s bedroom, with a double bed, tall cabinets and a miniature ceiling fan. Beside the bedroom is a bright, six-foot-square bathroom.

The living room has two loveseats, shelving and cabinets, and a fold-down table for dining.

The 96-square-foot kitchen is newly renovated and features an apartment-sized fridge, a 24-inch stove and an oversized sink. In the unfinished, 5-feet-10-inch-high basement is another bathroom and a small office.

“After 10 years in a basement apartment I didn’t need anything bigger,” says Ms. McIntyre, who works from home. “I don’t want to clean it.”

Like a growing number of people, the couple have decided that a modest house is better for their quality of life than a mansion in the burbs. On the extreme end of the trend are people who live in minuscule houses, sometimes not much bigger than a typical suburban bathroom. Motivated by environmental concerns, convenience and tight finances, they are saying goodbye to 1990s-style monster homes.

The shift got its start in the United States, with the launch of companies such as Tiny Texas Homes and Tumbleweed Tiny Homes, which offer pre-built houses and DIY plans. Today, there are dozens of websites and blogs featuring designs for houses as small as 65 square feet (including kitchen and bathroom), and the stories of people who live in them.

In addition to being low-maintenance, smaller houses cost less. A popular design in tiny-homes circles is the Tarleton from Tumbleweed Tiny Homes. Built on a trailer chassis, the house kit is 117 square feet, including a kitchen and bathroom. It sells for about $47,000 (U.S.) ready-made.

Will Pederson lives in a Tarleton he built on a communal farm outside Abbotsford, B.C., where he grows organic salad greens.

“I like the idea of only having the space you need, the efficiency of it,” he says. “It’s really efficient for heating. I’ve always been kind of a minimalist thinker and trying to reduce my number of possessions.”

Living in a space that small does require some lifestyle changes. Home electronics mean a laptop and a boom box rather than a big-screen television. Digital audio files and e-books replace most CDs and books.

Mr. Pedersen has a table that folds away to give him space for yoga, and has an unheated shed for storage. The entire space is heated with one plug-in radiator. Because it’s essentially an insulated one-room house, every activity, be it cooking, working on the computer or exercising, helps to heat it, Mr. Pederson says.

His wife, Alyson, lives nearby in a 300-square-foot house that she recently sold. In October, the couple will pack up his house and tow it to New Brunswick, where they have bought a 45-acre farm. They plan also to ship Alyson’s goats, start a dairy and live in the farm’s 900-square foot house, using Mr. Pederson’s tiny house for guests or seasonal labourers.

“There’s something nice about a small space. It’s comforting,” he says.

John Gower is another fan of smaller homes. The Victoria architect is one of only a handful who sells plans for houses under 800 square feet.

“The whole idea of the small-house focus started because I was in Nelson [B.C.], where there are all these small houses with nice, timeless lines to them and they’ve proven to be good dwellings over the decades. That was the inspiration for our whole design thrust,” he says.

The movement is a mixture of people trying to get into the housing market, environmentalists and empty-nesters, he says.

“There’s still the phenomenon of the empty-nesters building a home larger than they had during their child-rearing years because they can. It’s hard to understand,” he says. “That was in the 1990s. Today, they want to lighten their load and spend more time travelling and with their grandkids and in the garden.”

But tiny homes aren’t for everyone, he acknowledges. Only about 20 of his smallest homes have been built, mostly in rural British Columbia.

“I don’t know where these tiny houses fit in the spectrum. There’s a place for them,” he says. “As a culture we’re going to have to find many more models for housing as we face the limits of sustainability. If there’s a lot of belt-tightening going on, these might seem more attractive and less fringe. Right now, it takes a special individual to live in a space that small.”

Ms. McIntyre is happy in her little house, which is bright and welcoming inside. She acknowledges she’d like to be able to have more books, but the tiny house’s tiny price tag meant she and Mr. Lei could afford to buy a property of their own.

Before moving into the house, they shared an 880-square-foot condo downtown for 18 months. Still, after shedding duplicate possessions, their new home feels comparatively “spacious,” Ms. McIntyre says. Indeed, a family of four lived in the house before them.

“I like it. We picked happy, bright colours to paint it,” she says. “It’s cheap and easy to maintain, and we’ve already paid the mortgage off.”

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Contact the Jeffrey Team for more information  -  416-388-1960

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  • Builders say new standards will drive up prices

    Jane Gadd – Globe and Mail

    Ontario builders say that tougher insulation standards unveiled in the province’s new building code will add between $10,000 and $15,000 to the average cost of a new home in the next six years.

    “The energy-efficiency targets set out by the government for 2012 represent a monumental shift for our industry,” Victor Fiume, president of the Ontario Home Builders Association, said in a statement. “This will seriously affect affordability of housing in the future.”

    The province’s new building code calls for the staggered implementation of a 29-per-cent increase in ceiling insulation levels, a 50% improvement in basement wall insulation, windows that are 67% more airtight, and a minimum energy-efficiency rating of 90% for new furnaces.

    The government says the new standards will save enough energy to power 380,000 homes in the next eight years, and will reduce greenhouse gas emissions by an amount equal to removing 250,000 cars from Ontario’s roads. Homeowners will be able to recoup the added costs through savings on gas and hydro bills, it adds.

    “Conservation is a fundamental and key component of our energy plan for Ontario,” Energy Minister Dwight Duncan said. “The 2006 Building Code will enable future homeowners to enjoy long-term energy savings and at the same time reduce Ontario’s overall energy use.”

    But Mr. Fiume described the changes as one more factor pushing up real estate prices.

    “As an association, we are always concerned with the affordability of new homes for consumers,” he said. “With escalating new and resale house prices, rising interest rates, escalating development charges and increased cost of materials — and now the addition of costs related to the implementation of the new [code] — housing affordability will continue to be a challenge for Ontarians."

    The new code also requires more accessibility for people with disabilities in buildings constructed from now on. Public corridors will have to be wide enough to accommodate modern wheelchairs, tactile signs will have to be provided for the visually impaired, and 10% of units in any new apartment buildings and hotels must include accessibility features.

    "This change will increase flexibility and choice for hundreds of people with a developmental disability who are in need of supportive housing," said Geoffrey McMullen, chairman of the Provincial Network on Developmental Services.

    The Canadian National Institute for the Blind also expressed approval.

    "People with disabilities make an enormous contribution to our communities," CNIB director Dennis Tottenham said. "We are pleased with the government's progress in making Ontario accessible to all."

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