ing behind a piece of glass. A pump activates when a sensor in the panel senses that it’s hotter than the tempera- ture in the tank. Ed observes: “If you keep things simple, they work well.” Simplicity also keeps maintenance
issues at bay. The upkeep required for his solar electric system is minor; he’s committed only to adding water to the batteries every nine months and occasionally getting up to the roof to clean the panels with a brush and a little water.
Embracing the
Great Outdoors One of Ed’s first acts when he pur- chased his current house in 1988 was to rip up the existing lawn and replace it with native California plants and a fruit and vegetable garden. Unless rais- ing cows or running a golf course, he can’t imagine why anyone would need high-maintenance, water-wasting grass outside their home. But, as with many of Ed’s improvements, energy saving tends to trump aesthetics. That’s where Rachelle comes in. “A few years after Rachelle had
moved in here, she was telling a friend to meet her at the house,” Ed recalls, “and she said ‘It’s the one on the corner that looks like the Addams Family yard.’ I thought: ‘Oooh, maybe that garden isn’t quite as nice-looking as it used to be.’ It was very drought- tolerant, but it didn’t look good.” With Rachelle’s help, a new landscaper joined the effort of turning the formerly bleak-looking yard into an attractive mix of native plants that includes fragrant rosemary and purple- flowering sage along with broccoli, artichoke, corn and lettuce. Plans for the new family home will allow Ed an expanded capability to harvest rainwa- ter through a large catchment system with an underground tank, so that he can irrigate the gardens without draw- ing from the municipal water supply— which he characterizes as having, “… our straw dipped into someone else’s drink”—namely, Northern California’s water. “If you’re going to take water from someone else,” Ed advises, “the least you can do is to use it responsibly and not waste it on non-native species.”
Meeting in the Middle Bringing Rachelle’s aesthetic influence to bear has entailed replacing outdated living room curtains with attractive and energy-efficient wooden shutters, and finding ways to recycle without having large bins in plain sight. She’s orches- trating the design and layout of the new house—allowing for both enter- taining space and larger closets—while Ed focuses on its renewable energy systems—including more unshaded rooftop panels and orienting the build-
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SeattleAwakenings.com
ing to make the most of natural light. “If we don’t go LEED Platinum,
then who will?” Rachelle queries. “That alone is not easy; still, I want to make it look like other houses in the neighbor- hood. I don’t want a Jetsons’ house; su- per modern has never been my style. I‘d like to show people that you can have it all, and I’m praying that it’s true.” The Begleys got off to a good start
in March by tearing down an existing home on the property they recently purchased—96 percent of which, from cabinets to pipes, will be recycled or reused through Habitat for Humanity. By March 2012, the new house should be finished. They want their LEED Platinum home to serve as a model for people who are building new residenc- es, to show what is possible in achiev- ing real energy efficiency and waste reduction without sacrificing style or comfort. Ed’s aim is to ensure the place produces more energy than it uses. As before, the whole process will be documented. “I hope that I’ve shown what you can do with a ret- rofit,” Ed says. “Now I want to show people what you can do from the ground up in 2011 and beyond.” The family’s ongoing focus on
green living has made a major impact on Hayden, who accepts environ- mental consciousness as the norm. “I learned everything from my dad, from composting to solar panels,” Hayden says. “I always teach my friends to turn off the lights more often, take shorter showers, stuff like that.” Her green awareness gives this tween maturity beyond her years. As Rachelle says, “She thinks about things outside of herself. She’s always been conscientious. She’s also really concerned about the planet and very compassionate.” Hayden is proof that a family’s day-to-day environmen- tal commitments can leave a lasting impact that reaches far beyond the immediate family.
Brita Belli is the editor of E-The Envi- ronmental Magazine and the author of The Complete Idiot’s Guide to Renew- able Energy for Your Home. Her next book, due out this fall, explores the relationship of environmental toxins and autism.
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