
Making home improvements not only beautifies your house but also adds to it's value. However as homeowners become more environmentally conscious they look for ways to improve their homes and make them as "green" as possible. Here is a list of 21 home improvement tips for your home.
1. Consider installing solar panels. Although solar heating has been used to warm homes for thousands of years, solar panels are totally modern and very green. They have no moving parts; you sit them out in the sun, perhaps on your rooftop, hook up the wires and collect power without adding any fuel or replacing worn-out parts. (Too bad we can't do that for our body parts when they get older and worn out!) If you decide to buy some, consider used ones as they are quite a bargain and even after as long as twenty years have been known to produce a good percentage of the power that was generated when they were brand new.
2. Replace all the standard light bulbs in your home with compact fluorescent ones. These energy-smart bulbs use 70-75% less energy than the incandescent kind and last up to ten times longer! For example, by using a 26-watt, compact fluorescent light bulb (equivalent to 100 watt incandescent), consumers can save up to $59 dollars on energy costs over the life of the bulb, which can be anywhere from five to seven years.
3. Roof improvements. Believe it or not, research indicates that roof color and the type of material used can help to lower attic temperatures. Light colored tile roofs out perform the shingle ones when it comes to decreasing temperatures. If you are thinking about re-roofing your home, consider white tile, which has properties that will help reduce heat gain to your attic.
4. Install a motion detector outside home to replace your outdoor lighting. Outdoor lights left on all night waste energy and disturb wildlife. Light fixtures activated by motion sensors or a timer will keep area well lit and save energy and money to boot.
5. Don't waste water. Check your home carefully for leaky faucets and get them repaired as quickly as possible. Use cold water when laundering clothes and adjust your clean threshold if you possibly can. Those jeans of yours can probably be worn a few more times than usual before washing them, and can't that towel be dried off at least one more time before throwing it in the hamper? Make saving water a family affair. Set a good example by teaching your children how to turn off the water while they brush their teeth or take a quick shower.
6. Install low flow showerheads. They are a worthwhile investment (especially if you live in a rented space because you can take them with you). They cut down on water usage and save energy costs.
7. Create a compost pile in your backyard. Find a private spot in your yard to make a compost pile. Mix food wastes with dirt and use a shovel to turn the pile over every week or so to give it some air. Turn throwaways like eggshells, coffee grounds and spoiled vegetables into soil and garbage into something useful. Avoid the temptation to plant rude neighbors and passersby in your compost pile. (This will ruin everything and turn it bitter. Besides, that is homicide and does little for the environment, save to reduce it by one person!)
8. Install an aluminum-clad storm door. This type of door is energy-efficient and will help to insulate the entryway of your home.
9. Some considerations when heating and cooling our homes: Invest in a high-efficiency HVAC system that is Energy Star certified and install it in your home. This will greatly reduce the amount of greenhouse gasses emitted. It will also shave your utility bill enough to make you smile reasonably broadly. Look for a product with a higher SEER rating (Seasonal Energy Efficient Ratio). This means that the product in question meets strict government criteria necessary to be deemed "energy efficient." The standard is 13 SEER, but many heating and air conditioning products have a rating as high as 18 SEER.
10. Clean out your air conditioner filters or replace them regularly. A dirty filter will hamper the airflow, costing you more to run your system. When not at home, adjust the thermostat to accommodate the changing temperatures outside.
11. Consider investing in and installing an automated thermostat. High tech thermostats are well worth the cost, and what you spend, you will get back over time in lower energy bills. It is estimated that you can save about 3% of your heating costs for every degree you lower your thermostat during the winter and up to 6% for every degree you raise it during the summers.
12. Install glass doors for your fireplace. Glass doors are safer than fireplace screens. They also reduce the amount of heat that escapes through the chimney from your home. Use your fireplace for special occasions only as it sends precious heated air right up the chimney (or out the door, if you prefer that phrasing).
13. Use power strips for your home computers. Even after you turn off your computer, power continues to flow to peripherals like printers and scanners. Power strips prevent the energy from being wasted and only cost about thirty dollars.
14. Install more fans in your home. Exhaust fans serve a very specific purpose. They can pull unwanted heat and humidity from bathroom and kitchen spaces during the summer months. Ceiling fans can help reduce your family’s dependence on air conditioning during the summer and they are also helpful in the winter as they can push heat down from the ceiling.
15. Do an "energy audit" in your home and make a list of what needs to be done to get things up to "green par." Take that list to your online supplier or local hardware store and enlist their help in buying needed supplies. Plan the project as a family affair.
16. Insulate your home. Doors and windows are two of the most obvious areas of concern when it comes to home energy conservation. Use weather-stripping. Once air leaks have been detected, doors and windows are usually the first areas that need attention.
17. Seal off unexpected trouble spots. Sometimes the less obvious spots in your home can be a source of energy loss and you will need to be thorough in order to seek out and destroy them! Check out the areas around light switches and electrical outlets.
18. Live by the code of the 3 Rs; Refuse, Reuse and Recycle. Keep these three things in mind whenever you buy, use or discard anything. (If relatives and in-laws don't live up this standard, the next course of action can only be up to you.)
19. Stop a leak. Organize a "stop a leak day" on which everyone in your family tightens, insulates, replaces, caulks or does whatever else is necessary to make your home as "watertight" as possible.
20. Add insulation to your hot water heater. Don't forget that the standard water heater found in most homes is on all the time. Adding some extra insulation will save more energy than you would think and knock up to 15% off the costs of heating water.
21. Consider window tinting to reduce the glare of the sun. This has several beneficial and energy-saving effects. First of all, it will reduce heat loss in winter and heat gain in summer. Tinting will also eliminate up to 99% of damaging ultraviolet rays and reduce the fading of your fine fabrics and furnishings. So what are you waiting for? Let the sunshine in!
Julia Cocco'
Disney
Sloggi
regarding the SEER rating... you won't make your money back on anything over 15SEER, so really it isn't worth the amount you would have to pay for anything more. BUT if you have money to blow then by all means buy a larger SEER'd unit!
1great tips! so many! i wonder how much energy you save if you did everything on the list.
2These are great, I'm passing this along.
Style Before Comfort!
3Replacing the shower head is such an easy thing to do. They normally only cost about $5 or so and vastly improve the QUALITY of your shower! Plus save money and water
4i already have a compost pit in my yard
5I didn't know about powers strips...will start using them and incorporating some of these other points to do my part:)
These are all great tips, tdamji.
6great stuff! im definitely going to try to work on these. thanks!
7I already do quite a few of these. Great tips. Thanks for sharing.
8We were fortunate enough to be able to design our home from the ground up (it is still in the process of being built). All of our lighting considerations were based around using LED and Compact Florescent. We were able to install a fairly large solar array. All doors and windows are wired into a smart system that will monitor the heat and humidity for a really smart thermostat. Motion detectors everywhere that will turn on lights. Even smarter is these motion detectors are wired into the smart system as well and will know how many lights to turn on by what time of the day it is. So say it's is 10pm at night and someone is getting up for a bathroom run it will only turn on the low floor led lights in the hall instead of the full ceiling lights. One of the things my husband really wanted to do was install a grey water system that would store our filtered sink and shower water for use in watering the lawns. Unfortunately it was expensive and we got a lot of push back from everyone around us. I wish we would have ignored them as California is looking at possible water rationing by next summer
Considering the amount of computers we have that tip on the power strip is FANTASTIC, I really had no idea that something so small could make a difference. Thanks for the great post (as always)
9thats amazing macgirl! too bad about the grey water thing!
water shortages seem to be
everywhere these days. i am so envious of all your lighting systems - i'd love to have floor LED lighting for the middle of the night so i am not totally blinded when i get up! did you guys
install everything yourselves? so impressive...!!
10My husband ran all the wiring for the lighting controls, ethernet, audio and security cable. He has been the driving force on this project and has come up with all the great ideas for lighting schemes to save energy. The rest is being installed by pros. He did have to do quite a bit of planning with the solar people. I really had no idea that solar had to be such an exact science with the angles and tilt of our panels. Once company even wanted us to put on our roof slightly crooked to help with the angle. Um, no. We were able to fit a 7 kilowatt system on it but would have gone bigger if possible. We are hoping to produce 80% of our own electricity, which is HUGE since we have quite a few electronics.
11again, i am so impressed, macgirl! I aspire to have my own home with a great lighting plan which is both energy-efficient and as practical/customised as yours some day!
12I love this tips. Some of them My mom does put to practice. WE live in Mexico, on the border that's how she find those tips. We just build our house and it cost us a lot, for teh material we were using. Most of the people just build their houses... THEN THEY TURN ON THEIR FREAKING AIRS!!! and they want to be cold cold... not cool.
Our house is fresh, illuminated and pretty. That is the reason why it cost us a lot more and why we wait for it.
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