Tag Archives: green real estate

Green TIC’s in Noe Valley: Free Prius??!

Mid-Century swank Green Homes in Noe Valley with gorgeous views of The City, plus a chance for a free Prius!  Can’t you just imagine the view from your Eames Chair in the living room?

If you would like a private showing of these fabulous Green TIC’s, I can set it up and would be delighted to negotiate on your behalf to ensure a smooth transaction from start to finish.  Just fill out the contact form on the ‘About Me‘ page.  Don’t forget I give a $1000 gift certificate to The Green Home Center to all my closed buyers as a way of jumpstarting the greening of your new home.

Huge price reduction – PLUS a FREE PRIUS to the first buyer of any of the three 2BR units. Twilight Champage open this Thursday 10/16 from 6-8pm, and by appointment. If you have not seen these units, take a look at www.158Laidley.com

Three 2bd units $699-769K  -  1bd $509,000  -  Studio $359,000
All units feature:
• Sweeping views of Downtown & Bay Bridge
• 1 car garage parking – huge storage space - in-unit laundry
• CaesarStone counters, Bosch appliances, Maple cabinets
• Eco-friendly finishes and low VOC paint

PRICE REDUCTION. Remarkable eco-modern renovation of mid-century view property, finished to highest standards of any new construction you’ll find in the City. Fabulous neighborhood. Sweeping views. Eco-friendly bamboo & cork floors, wool carpet, low VOC paint. Bosch & FisherPaykel appliances, CaesarStone counters, maple kitchen cabinets. Massive picture windows. All building systems updated. Totally wired for cable and internet. State-of-the-art soundproofing. An extraordinary place to live.

Again, for a private showing, please contact me at 415.652.8161 and I’ll set it up.  Thanks for your business!

Wanna live like DJ Jazzy Jeff?

If DJ Jazzy Jeff were buying a new place here in The City, I bet it’d be hereThere are only two units remaining for sale at the Heritage on Fillmore. Right in the heart of the newly revitalized Fillmore, this tower is built above the new (and awesome) Yoshi’s.

I am a member of the Buchanan YMCA right around the corner, and so am in this neighborhood almost every day.  It’s changing a lot, with new-fangled fro-yo places opening up and the incredible soul food at 1300Fillmore showing how the heritage of a neighborhood can be preserved amidst the waves of gentrification.   Basically, it’s right by Hayes Valley, Lower Pac Hts, J-town,the Van Ness corridor, and close to Civic Center.  I consider it to be very centrally located, and generally sunnier than some other neighborhoods.

With only two units remaining, I bet they’re ready to get them sold and call it a done deal.  Between you and me, I bet they’re bracing themselves for some serious negotiation.

If you’re interested in having a look around at either of these two units, I can arrange a private showing and would be happy to stand by your side as your exclusive Buyer’s agent in negotiating the transaction.

Oh, and don’t forget, I give a $1000 gift certificate to The Green Home Center to all my closed Buyers.  A way to jumpstart the green outiftting of your jazzy new condo in the Fillmore.

Just a Box of Rain…

San Francisco Adopts Rainwater Harvesting Rules: Thanks to the San Francisco Department of Building Inspection, Department of Public Health, and Public Utilities Commission, homeowners may now legally divert untreated rainwater for irrigation, toilet flushing, and other non-potable uses. As far as we know, San Francisco is the first city in California to formally adopt this practice.

Be the proud owner of a new rain barrel – compliments of the SFPUC’s Rainwater Harvesting Program! Attend a rainwater harvesting workshop at the Big Blue Bucket Eco-Fair and enter a raffle to win a free rain barrel (San Francisco residents only — one hundred barrels will be given away at the event). In addition, you’ll learn how to attach a rain barrel to your roof downspout, and how to link several rain barrels together to increase storage volume.

Big Blue Bucket Eco-Fair: Saturday, October 11, 10am – 2pm, at the SFPUC Southeast Treatment Plant (entrance at Jerrold Avenue and Phelps Street).

Rainwater harvesting workshop times (fifty-person capasity limit per workshop):

10:30am
11:30am
12:30pm
1:30pm

Visit: http://www.bigbluebucket.org/ for details.

The Public Utilities Commission, the Department of Public Health, and the Department of Building Inspection have partnered to encourage the safe use of rainwater for irrigation and toilet flushing without requiring special treatment. Systems designed to collect and treat rainwater for any potable uses will be inspected and permitted on a case- by-case basis.

What is rainwater harvesting?
Rainwater harvesting is the practice of collecting and using rainwater from hard surfaces such as roofs. It is an age-old technology that is growing in popularity as people look for ways to use water resources more wisely. Communities in ancient Rome were designed with individual cisterns and paved courtyards, which captured rainwater to augment supply from the city’s aqueducts.

Until recently, urban areas served by municipal water have tended to overlook rainwater as a water resource. San Francisco would like to change that by raising awareness about rainwater harvesting and promoting its use.

Why harvest rainwater?
When you install a rainwater harvesting system at home, you are helping to maintain the health and beauty of San Francisco’s urban watershed in many ways. By harvesting rainwater you:

  • Keep relatively clean water out of the combined sewer system and make it available for use
  • Reduce the energy and chemicals needed to treat stormwater in San Francisco’s combined sewer and the energy expended transporting water from far away
  • Reduce the volume and peak flows of stormwater entering the sewer, thereby reducing flooding and combined sewer overflows
  • Reduce the volume of potable water used for non-potable applications such as irrigation and toilet flushing

Getting Started:
Click here to download our rainwater harvesting brochure.

Resources:
Green Dean TV:  Installing a Rain Harvester
YouTube:  Rain Water

1960′s Modern meets Green in Noe Valley

from Inhabitat

” Nestled in Noe Valley, a San Francisco neighborhood known for its contradictions, rests the Choy Residence, a newly remodeled 1960’s home turned modern dwelling. Terry & Terry Architecture took a decidedly “less is more” approach to the project, literally carving out the 1960’s home’s front entry and center core, straight through to the rear facade. The results of their carefully crafted subtractions is an exterior deck with a view and an entry that allows tremendous amounts of natural daylight to flood the interior spaces while increasing natural ventilation and circulation.


The bands of wood running along the home’s interior and exterior contribute more than visual appeal – they’re part of a double-wall system that allows the exterior panels to breathe and avoid heat build-up. The wood itself is IPE, a sustainably harvested Brazilian Hardwood that has the natural ability to resist mold, rot, and insects without the application of any chemicals.



During the rainy season, the roof of the Choy Residence collects all the runoff and drops it into storage tanks in the basement to be used to irrigate the landscape during the dry season. Provisions have been provided on the north end of the roof, for a soon-to-come solar array that will capture energy whenever the sun shines down on the home.

5 Ways Your Home is Making You Sick

Natural Home & Garden
5 Ways Your Home is Making You Sick
By: Lisa and Ron Beres


Your home should be an oasis—a safe place where you go to relax at the end of a long work day, where you spend time with your loved ones, and where you rest and recharge each night as you sleep. But the very place you go to seek comfort and peace may actually be making you sick. As Americans embrace green products, we need to look at not only our eco-footprint, but also how to make our homes natural, healthy havens.

Toxic Cleaning Products. For generations we’ve been told that a clean home is a healthy home. However, one check in your cleaning closet will likely reveal a host of chemicals. You think you’re doing your family a favor by using anti-bacterial wipes and disinfectant sprays, but did you know those products contain pesticides? Furniture polish can contain silicone, butane gas and propane. And kids are especially vulnerable to these chemicals, by the very nature of their size and because they put everything in their mouths.

Look at the labels on cleaning products and choose ones with ingredients that you can pronounce. There are a growing number of non-toxic brands on the market and most supermarkets now carry at least one type of natural cleaning product. Make your own natural cleaners using basic ingredients like baking soda, vinegar and tea tree oil. Not only will they clean just as well as the store bought products, but they’ll smell better and save you money.

Unhealthy Bedding. Did you know that your bedroom can be filled with formaldehyde, which outgases harmful VOC’s? Formaldehyde is released from everyday household furnishings and bedding like drapery, bed linens and upholstery, and has been known to cause wheezing, allergic reactions and even serious illness.

Replace old bedding with organic linens. Get rid of ‘wrinkle-free’ and other sheets with synthetic additives and get organic cotton sheets. You can also find organic mattresses covers made from natural raw ingredients that will provide an allergen barrier.

Poor Indoor Air Quality. The EPA lists indoor air quality as one of the top 5 environmental health risks the U.S. faces today.

The simplest way to improve the air quality is to open windows and let the fresh air in! Unfortunately, sometimes—like in the winter—that’s not an option. What you can do is get an air purifier with a HEPA filter. There are many different models, including portable ones that can remove dust, pollens, dander, odors, chemical vapors and more. Also, replace your furnace air filters regularly.

Non-filtered Drinking and Bath Water.
Chlorine, parasites, and heavy metals may be in your drinking and bath water. Research has shown that chlorine and its assorted byproducts have been linked to serious illnesses like colon and bladder cancer. Most people don’t realize that they can also expose themselves to these contaminants while bathing.

The best way to ensure clean tap water is to install a whole house water filter. For a relatively small investment of under a thousand dollars, you can buy a reverse osmosis water filter system that will make the water from your tap cleaner than bottled water. Another option is installing separate shower head filters and faucet water filters. For either a whole house system or separate shower and countertop water filters, you need to change cartridges on a regular basis.

Electromagnetic Radiation. Electricity in our homes and offices is such a part of modern day life that we don’t even think about it. Every day we rely on its convenience for cooking, cleaning, watching TV, faxing, printing, etc. But at what cost? The price we pay extends well beyond money. The more costly price is our health.

Electrical current speeding through wires in our home and office walls creates electromagnetic fields (EMFs). These fields significantly disrupt the sensitive signals with which our brains and nervous systems communicate.

Scientific studies have shown that by reducing electromagnetic radiation from the bedroom, people slept better and even healed faster. Potential sources of electromagnetic radiation include building wiring, and electric appliances like alarm clocks. There are tests that can be performed to find out what circuit breakers and/or electric appliances need to be de-energized to reduce electromagnetic radiation.

Some ways to reduce electromagnetic radiation in your bedroom are to remove or unplug TV’s and radios before going to bed, and to switch to a battery operated alarm clock. You can also turn off the circuit breakers to the bedroom each night.