It used to be that a green home was an expensive home. Call it a combination of higher material costs and the need for a little more know-how than the kind that goes into your average tract home — the upshot was that building green was out of reach for a lot of the people. Slowly, though, that’s been changing, and one of the key factors in increasing the cost-effectiveness of green building has been prefabrication.
A number of different companies have been making a name for themselves with LEED-ready prefabs in recent years, including Blu Homes. Now Jetson Green reports that Bensonwood Homes of New Hampshire — a precision builder best known for high-end timber frame and panelized custom homes — has launched a line of high-performance prefab Unity Homes designed to Passive House standards, out of the box.
This new line of prefabs is based on Bensonwood’s original
Unity House, a net-zero energy residence it constructed on the campus of Unity College in Maine that received LEED Platinum certification back in 2008.
The Unity line consists of four unique, flat-packed prefab homes, each of which are engineered to consume 50 to 75 percent less energy than standard new home. Impressively, these homes are made to go up nearly air-tight, and pass the rigorous demands of Passive House certification: triple-paned Loewen windows, high levels of cellulose insulation (R35 walls and R44 roof), buttoned-up building shells, energy recovery ventilators, air-source heat pumps and more. Add a solar power system, and you can kick your new Unity house up to net zero status.
The Unity line consists of the
Tradd, a Cape Cod-style residence (2,056 – 2,452 square feet); the
Xyla, and “all-American” single-floor bungalow (1,113 – 1,591 square feet); the
Värm, a Swedish farmhouse-style residence (1,782 – 2,896 square feet); and the
Zūm, a contemporary modern home (1,594 – 2,133-square-feet). Prices for these homes range from just under $200,000 to $450,000 (not counting permits, taxes, site excavation, etc.) More information is available
online.
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An Affordable Prefabbed Passive House Line Is Launched – EarthTechling