September-October 2008

Making Solar Affordable

Rivercane Village on Cane Creek will soon be the countrys largest housing development powered almost entirely by onsite solar thermal energy.

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Photo: S. Rantis Architects

By Dan Rafter

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The solar thermal system not only is helping Ryan keep the cost of purchasing a home at a more reasonable level, it is also making the homes themselves more affordable places to live. The solar heating, cooling, and hot water services will now be a known quantity—for a period of up to 20 years—to residents. No longer will they have to wonder just how high their heating and cooling bills will be each month.

Because this is the first large-scale residential application of the technology, Ryan and Clark say they do not yet know how much money each month the solar thermal system will save residents. But, they say, it will be a significant amount.

“This model allows for far greater predictability and stability in residents’ energy costs,” Ryan says. “We can go out to buyers with a proposition: In a world of never-ending conventional energy cost increases, here is an opportunity for residents to have known energy costs for a period of up to 20 years. That’s been a real significant benefit that, coupled with the overall efficiency of the units themselves, is attracting a lot of interest from consumers. The predictability of monthly costs is a win all the way around.”

For Rivercane to be a success, and for its innovative thermal heating and cooling system to eventually become a more mainstream product, the housing development needs to attract one thing: residents.

So far, the developers are promoting Rivercane through a combination of traditional paid advertising and a more grassroots approach. Fortunately, news organizations intrigued by Rivercane’s status as the country’s largest solar thermal project. This means many of them have written their own news stories about the development.

And these stories have piqued the interest of several potential buyers, Ryan says.

“The unique nature of the community, its landmark nature, has meant that we are getting a lot of interest from folks,” he says. “It’s new, different. We are looking to leverage this as much as possible. The response to the small amount of traditional marketing we’ve done so far has been very strong. There is a market out there that is looking for a different place. Rivercane is giving them an option.”

This effort is helped by the fact that green building and energy-efficient homes—not to mention the lower monthly utility bills that come with them—have become a hot selling point.

“Everyone wants to do something green,” says Clark. “We don’t find too many who don’t want to do anything from an energy conservation standpoint. At the end of the day, having an energy-efficient home helps owners in their pocketbooks. We’ve been able to come together and make this a win-win proposition for everyone. We are building a community that embraces sustainable living. Solar technologies, renewable technologies, a green parkway—we have it all in one development. This will set a template for others to follow.”

“We believe this project will serve as a model for others for a lot of different reasons,” says Ryan. “One of the goals from the onset of this project was to create a formula that can be repeated in any market. We are in this process now. We are actively looking for opportunities in this market and in others to repeat this process.”

The $60-million housing community should bring several benefits to the surrounding area of Fletcher, he adds. The development is located within walking distance of the adjacent Fletcher Business Park, which had been temporarily vacated after a large manufacturer pulled out of the site.

The officials running the industrial park, though, have worked hard to bring businesses and manufacturers back to the site. These officials hope that the development of Rivercane—a development that they say will prove popular thanks in large part to the project’s innovative solar thermal system and the affordable housing prices that system is helping to bring to Rivercane—will attract even more employers to the industrial park.

“Rivercane Village will provide moderately priced housing within easy walking distance of these employers,” says Rusty Pulliam, president and chief executive officer of the business park’s ownership group, in a written statement. “And that in turn will help attract more industry to the park.”

Ryan says that Rivercane Village is targeted largely toward the mostly middle-class workers who will work at the nearby business park. The housing development’s site sits between the Fletcher Business Park and a creek side forest. Green Development Partners will build hiking trails and pavilions through the woods, place the parcel in a conservation easement, and then donate that easement to the town of Fletcher, so that it can extend its greenway.

Even though construction was not yet set to begin until later in 2008, both Clark and Ryan are looking forward to a successful development.

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Rivercane has a lot to offer its future residents, the men say. Not the least among these benefits is its solar thermal cooling and heating system. What resident, after all, would prefer the always changing, seemingly always rising, monthly costs of traditional heating-and-cooling systems when they can instead look forward to stable, and lower, monthly utility bills?

“Each unit will be monitored on its energy consumption, and the energy bill for that portion will be included in the owners’ association fees,” says Clark. “We figured that about 80% of owners’ overall energy bills go to hot water, heating, and cooling. If we can fix that for the homeowners, we’ve taken care of almost 80% of their overall energy bills annually. That’s a big draw for a lot of people.”

Author's Bio: Dan Rafter is a technical writer based in Illinois.

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