Reddit Reddit reviews Green from the Ground Up: Sustainable, Healthy, and Energy-Efficient Home Construction (Builder's Guide)

We found 3 Reddit comments about Green from the Ground Up: Sustainable, Healthy, and Energy-Efficient Home Construction (Builder's Guide). Here are the top ones, ranked by their Reddit score.

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Green from the Ground Up: Sustainable, Healthy, and Energy-Efficient Home Construction (Builder's Guide)
ISBN13: 9781561589739Condition: NewNotes: BRAND NEW FROM PUBLISHER! 100% Satisfaction Guarantee. Tracking provided on most orders. Buy with Confidence! Millions of books sold!
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3 Reddit comments about Green from the Ground Up: Sustainable, Healthy, and Energy-Efficient Home Construction (Builder's Guide):

u/jssj13 · 13 pointsr/RealEstate

Why build yourself? Are you looking for something in particular? Building a house in not an easy endeavor.

I'm saying that as a "builder" now working on my second build. I'm not a traditional builder, but I was/am working with smaller in-city lots and am building specifically for long term hold rental properties. My properties had to be custom designed to fit the lots and are for student rentals, so I designed them with smaller bedrooms without master suites, low maintenance long term items (spray foamed the entire exterior of the house, standing seam roof, etc) I literally built the house myself. I was the GC and did a lot of the work myself. It took me about 15 months (demo to CO) for the first one and the second we broke ground about 3 months ago. The drawing and permitting process took ~6 months prior on both. It was an extremely rewarding experience once I finished, but it was extremely stressful on the family and I just can't imagine a normal person doing it. I literally was on my job site 95% of the days over those 15 months.

I'm a huge fan of building science and while I like the idea of Passivehaus, I'm would caution that reaching those higher limits may not be worth the effort if you aren't a building science nerd like I am. More often than not many "normal" contractors will either lie to you saying they know what you want and know how to do it or will have the deer in the headlights look. If you want to get to the higher standards you will have to find those specific contractors and they are not cheap nor are they always readily available.

Agreed with the other user on low maintenance material. The current house I'm building I found a new siding that is definitely more expensive, but is actually dyed through (composite) and therefore will never need to be painted and it being a composite means no caulk. Again that is a tradeoff of upfront cost versus down the road cost.

Lastly before I built my first house I read for almost 2 years. I was/am a full time landlord so am fairly free so that reading was really "studying" and "preparing"for me. One minor note regarding the book list is that I wasn't looking for a builder as I had time and wanted to try and build a house. So many of the books I read were more granular and not so much about permitting and budgeting, etc. I figured I would figure out that stuff as I went along and I did. One big caveat, I didn't finance my build, but if you are you will more than likely need to hire a licensed GC/builder.

Books I read:

  1. I read a lot of the IRC code book (make sure you municipality uses the IRC). This was to ensure that I could check on the people that I hired.

    https://www.amazon.com/International-Residential-Two-Family-Dwellings-Council/dp/1609837371

  1. Read a lot about building science. Not in any particular order of preference.

    Green from the ground up

    https://www.amazon.com/Green-Ground-Sustainable-Energy-Efficient-Construction/dp/156158973X

    Green Home Building

    https://www.amazon.com/Green-Home-Building-Money-Saving-High-Performance/dp/0865717796

    Superhouse

    https://www.amazon.com/Super-House-Efficiency-Dazzling-Strength/dp/0965792633

    Buildings don't lie

    https://www.amazon.com/Buildings-Dont-Lie-Henry-Gifford/dp/0999011006

    Complete visual guide to building a house

    https://www.amazon.com/Complete-Visual-Guide-Building-House/dp/1600850227

  2. A lot of the Taunton Press For Pros by Pros (framing, wiring a house, siding, plumbing, concrete, trim, windows) books. Those were for my education on the utilities as I did most of this myself. Some of this may be too granular for you, but still lots of great info in there.

    https://www.amazon.com/s?k=Taunton+For+Pros+by+Pros&ref=nb_sb_noss

    There were many more books, but these are the ones I thought worthwhile to buy.
u/nmkcole03 · 2 pointsr/TinyHouses

Cool design!

I highly recommend taking a look at the book “Green From the Ground Up,” it provides great insight into making an affordable, healthy, and quality home, and would apply even better to a tiny house!

https://www.amazon.com/Green-Ground-Sustainable-Energy-Efficient-Construction/dp/156158973X

u/Ask_Seek_Knock · 1 pointr/Random_Acts_Of_Amazon


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