Amory Lovins’ Green Home for a Greener Solution

This post is a reorganized post of Grist’s article, “Amory Lovins’ high-tech home skimps on energy but not on comfort” by Ben Adler.


Owner: Amory Lovins (Physicist | World-renowned energy-efficiency expert | Co-founder of the Rocky Mountain Institute in 1982 with his then-wife L. Hunter Lovins)

Property: A 4,000-square-foot super-efficient, low-carbon, combustion-free home

Location: Nestled up in the mountains 14 miles from Aspen | High elevation around 8,000 feet | Old Snowmass, Colorado, United States

Style: A classic adobe style, indigenous to the Mountain West

Nickname:  “The Banana Farm!” Why? Lovins grows the tropical fruits in its greenhouse!

History: Completed the original structure in 1984 | A high-tech makeover in 2009

Main challenge to build the house: Heating

Solution: 16 inches concrete, locally harvested sandstone Thick Walls

Unintended Benefit: Eliminating the need to build a heating system at all!

7 Other Unique Features:

Super-windows” with microscopically thin layers of gases such as krypton and xenon that let in light but prevent heat exchange. [Equivalent of 16 layers of glass but using only 2 layers and costs less than 3]

  1. All Renewable Electricity for household use: Massive solar panels for the roof, carport, and grounds alongside the building!
  2. Super-efficient Appliances: Dishwasher (from Swedish company Asko) [Its sensors measure the cleanliness of the water coming out and stop washing when the water is clean, instead of continuing to run for another hour] LED light
  3. Wide Roof  (Lots of natural light during daytime!)
  4. Greenhouse in the middle of the building, between the living area and the office — Tropical fruit in the greenhouse! Bananas, Mangos and Coffee! [These plants consume CO2, release humidity and store heat.]
  5. Pond
  6. Innovative bathroom — [Japanese-style] sink on top of the toilet tank [When you flush the toilet, you can wash your hands in the water that will then refill the tank]
  7. A solar-heated hot tub

Bonus: Looking out at the stunning mountain views from the hot tub

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