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You can make small changes that have a great impact on the environment without spending that kind of money. Use compact fluorescent bulbs. Replace appliances with energy efficient ones when you're ready. Install a tankless water heater instead of a traditional one. Simple changes make a big difference.
POSTED Tue, Nov 6, 2007 7:25 AM PST
Woah sounds like a seet house
POSTED Tue, Nov 6, 2007 9:28 AM PST
CAN'T READ CARTOONS IN THE WAY
POSTED Tue, Nov 6, 2007 10:22 AM PST
yay, bubble talk rocks .
POSTED Tue, Nov 6, 2007 10:42 AM PST
thats tight
POSTED Tue, Nov 6, 2007 2:03 PM PST
As was mentioned earlier, you can do a great deal to help the environment by taking shorter showers, checking that no leaks are within your home or piping, recycling, unplugging electrical outlets in which usage is of no importance, and switching to environmentally-friendly lighting. I switched my lightbulb in my lamp a few years ago, I use the lamp everyday for many hours while finishing homework and reading, and I've still yet to replace it. They work amazingly!
POSTED Tue, Nov 6, 2007 2:17 PM PST
One day? OOOOOOHH. I worked for a company back in the late 60's that put up a 24' x 48' prefabricated house in one day. Hit the owner's property where the foundation was waiting early in the morning with the pieces of the house on big tractor trailer rigs and by end of the day you had a house ready to live in.
POSTED Tue, Nov 6, 2007 2:17 PM PST
when will you tree-hugging whackos get it? there's nothing individuals can do to "save" the environment! everyone on the planet would have to convert to "green" or "energy efficient" appliances and vehicles at the same exact time to even have the slightest empact on the environment! how are you gonna get 7 billion people to participate cooperatively? besides, the earth has survived nearly 400 billion years without humans and will certainly find a way to regulate itself! and whatever happened to that gigantic hole in the upper atmosphere from the 70's and 80's? wouldn't that ease the "greenhouse gas" effect everyone is so up-in-arms about? get real people and stop thinking small things here and there make a difference, except on your own conscious!!
POSTED Tue, Nov 6, 2007 2:18 PM PST
I'll take twom please
POSTED Tue, Nov 6, 2007 2:20 PM PST
Don't need to spend that kind of money to be nice to the environment. Lots of builders use recycled materials. Money doesn't buy happiness and it won't make the earth a better place either.
POSTED Tue, Nov 6, 2007 2:21 PM PST
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People of the Web

The Green Dream Home

The Wired LivingHome shows connectivity and sustainability can live together -- but it takes green to be green under this roof.

By KEVIN SITES, MON NOV 5, 6:46 PM PST

If the International Space Station and a Toyota Prius were to mate, the Wired LivingHome would be its offspring - a mix of space-age technology and earth-friendly design that makes the effort to save the planet seem, at first glance, a little less austere.

The Wired LivingHome combines high design with the latest in green technology.

The five-bedroom, four-bathroom house is a joint project of Wired Magazine and the architectural firm LivingHomes and was constructed out of eleven glass and steel prefabricated modules on a sloping canyon lot in the exclusive Brentwood neighborhood of Los Angeles.

The concept is to show that connectivity and sustainable living don't have to be mutually exclusive.

"Up to now, green has been thought of as really granola and you have to make a sacrifice," says Shiron Bell, one of the Wired LivingHome tour guides. "There's no sacrifice in this house at all."

The dwelling is literally built on a foundation of recycled materials that includes the glass in the windows and the steel girders that make up the modules. And the redwood planks that provide the distinctive exterior face have already had two other lives before this latest incarnation-once as the roof of an Army barracks and once as the trestles of a bridge.

Inside, the floors are made of bamboo, a plant that grows so quickly it nearly dares you to cut it down, walls are softened and warmed with coverings of hemp-and insulated with soybean fiber. There's a chair made of discarded margarine containers and a bench constructed of recycled milk cartons.

If that's all too low-tech for you, step inside one of the four bathrooms, which offer two water-saving flush options (depending on the nature of your pit stop). There's also a countertop range that won't burn your hands or anything else it's not supposed to, since it only conducts heat when in contact with cast iron cookware.

Touch smart computers can be found in almost every room, allowing you to control nearly every aspect of the house while monitoring energy and water usage. Heated family debates can be settled conclusively with a quick Internet fact check.

Every gallon of water and kilowatt of energy used in the house can be tracked on the Web.

On the more romantic side, the home's electronic control system allows you to automatically adjust the lighting, music and temperature of each room in the house. An upbeat Buena Vista Social Club salsa vibe in the living room can seamlessly slip into more subdued lighting and a chill, martini lounge atmosphere as you approach the master bedroom.

The home was designed by celebrated architect Ray Kappe, whose foray into sustainable architecture has led to experiments with prefabricated, modular units-in which some homes can be completely assembled in as little as one day.

But while the home is green, the price tag is hardly lean - the Wired LivingHome comes in at a bank-busting $4.3 million, a not-so-subtle reminder that conservation wrapped in luxury is not without its price.

-Producer: Jamie Rubin

-Camera: Kevin Sites and Didrik Johnck

-Video editor: Didrik Johnck 

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