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 practice of green construction—where developers rely on environmentally friendly materials, energy-efficient appliances, and alternative sources of energy to create homes that cause less stress on their surroundings—has become a popular marketing tool for homebuilders. The reason for this is simple: Green homes appeal to a growing number of buyers, especially those who want to lower their monthly utility bills and do good at the same time. Unfortunately, many buyers who would like to purchase an environmentally friendly house too often can’t afford them. Most green-built homes are simply priced too high for the average buyer.

Tom Ryan, developer and managing partner of Green Development Partners in Asheville, NC, wants to change this. Green living should be affordable to all homebuyers, he says, and he’s prepared to take the steps to make sure it is. To help his vision of affordable green living become reality, Ryan is partnering with officials at Fletcher, NC-based Appalachian Energy to create what will be the country’s largest housing development powered mainly by onsite solar thermal energy.

“One of our goals has been to build a green development that is affordable to the majority of buyers,” says Ryan. “Traditionally, green building has been primarily reserved for the higher-end buyer. We wanted to change that.”

The development, the mixed-use Rivercane Village at Cane Creek, in Fletcher, will offer homes priced from $100,000 to $300,000—quite reasonable in this current real estate market. Green Development Partners is able to keep these prices down to this affordable level, thanks mainly to the project’s solar thermal infrastructure.

Appalachian Energy, an importer and installer of renewable energy systems, is investing more than $2.6 million to provide the solar thermal system at Rivercane. But the company will recoup this investment over the following years by selling energy units to the Rivercane homeowners association. And the solar system, which will provide enough power to Rivercane’s property owners to handle nearly 80% of their heating, cooling, and hot water needs, means that Green Development Partners will save $3 million to $4 million in costs by not having to install traditional heat pumps and furnaces throughout the development.

Green Development Partners can then pass on this savings to their future homebuyers.

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“What really allows this project to be affordable is that we are breaking new ground with the solar components,” Ryan says. “We don’t have to, as a development, pass on that direct cost to the homeowners. The homeowners get 100% of the benefits of the solar system, but they don’t have to pay for that cost over the years.”

Ryan and Scott Clark, chief executive officer of Appalachian Energy, say the partnership model they have forged at Rivercane Village, as well as the solar thermal system, are already common in residential construction in European countries. In the US, though, solar thermal for cooling—in addition to solar thermal for its more common use of providing heating—has largely been reserved for commercial applications. The two men are hoping that their Rivercane project can serve as a model for other developers and energy providers, and as an impetus to more examples of affordable green housing across the country. Next Page >

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