Natural Remodeling for the Not-So-Green House: Bringing Your Home into Harmony with Nature (Natural Home & Garden) (Paperback)
December 22, 2009 by admin
Filed under Green Building Products
This absolutely indispensable and lavishly photographed guide will become a cornerstone work for years to come. It redefines the best way to “go green” and addresses a timely topic in a way designed to appeal to a growing and eager audience. Completely user-friendly and filled with motivational case studies and informative graphics. Every page leads would-be remodellers through the process of understanding their home and surroundings so they’ll arrive at the perfect design solution (more…)















I’ve been working as the City of Portland’s green building specialist for the past six years. In my work I talk to many homeowners, designers and contractors about green home remodeling. Almost all would like a resource that explains sustainable or green building clearly and provides useful guidance for making choices. From now on, this will be one of the books I recommend to them. The authors have succeeded in making a complex topic interesting and enjoyable to learn about. Whatever your goals, lifestyle or budget, you will find helpful ideas to achieve your green remodel.
Mike O’Brien
I am pretty much tearing my hiouse down and rebuilding it. I’ve been so stuck in reviewing technical aspects of framing construction and the sort that I really got hung up in “styles” and “curb appeal” and lost site of what living in my house really meant to me…being happy in my space and surrondings. I happened to order because it was suggested with another I purcahsed and it changed almost everything I was looking at and thinking of. An example, after working through some of the reading I was reminded during this cold February in Michigan that I love the smell of a coming rain storm and the feel of a breeze through a house. I went back and made some great changes to my technical specs based on the site analysis the book recommeded. I wasn’t thinking about prevailing winds and storm directions at all other than the general rules of which way to point a house! Another absolutley great point is that this book is green without an agenda. I’m only half way through but I haven’t read anything about building my house out of used bottles or tires yet and at one point the book suggests that a classic green application can have a resource cost point that makes it a disadvantage to the modern contemporary appraoch. Everyone wants to be at least a little green and this book helps. It’s a great book and is loaded with excellent, and I stress, EXCELLENT information both technical and not that is delivered in more of an article format that keeps your attention and provides a logical sequence to putting the pieces of the puzzle together. The photos are bright and beautiful. This may turn out to be the best book I bought to remodel my home.
Books on remodeling have tended to take one of two tracks: aesthetics and harmony with lifestyle or environmentally sensitive and responsible. With this book, the authors have taken an important step in integrating what has been the somewhat esoteric field of green ‘thinking’ with mainstream remodeling. They enable us to recognize that these paths not only complement each other, but drawn together open an entirely new range of creative and spatial possibilities.
I like this book a lot. What really set it apart were the authors’ broad knowledge of green building practices, eye for detail and sensitivity to clients’ needs and budgets. Their passion for bringing the possibilities of green to the mainstream is evident through out the book, and contagious. Highly recommended.
5.0 out of 5 stars
I love this book
If you a remodeling or building, and are interested in restoring and/or maintaining your health, then this book is a must have.
5.0 out of 5 stars
great book
As an architect, I appreciate this thorough and detailed look at natural remodeling techniques and am applying some of these to my own home.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Textbook potential
I’ve been teaching at a community college for 16 years on the topic of energy efficiency, Passive solar, Building Science, green building, healthy home and alternative structures…
5.0 out of 5 stars
Read this book before remodeling.
This is an outstanding book on remodeling your home to blend in with nature, and to avoid introducing toxic products into your home. Great ideas and photos.
4.0 out of 5 stars
good ideas
There were many good ideas in this book. Some more expensive than the average person could afford. I read Building Green: A Complete How-To Guide to Alternative Building Methods…
5.0 out of 5 stars
Go get it! You will love it!
And I am glad I did! I am even gladder to know that more people are waking up to the idea of natural remodeling.
5.0 out of 5 stars
PERFECTION!
I could not put this book down. It answers all of my questions and concerns as I begin to contemplate the large undertaking of creating a healthy, eco-friendly home for our…
4.0 out of 5 stars
Unconventional remodeling
If you are prepared to surround your house with hay bales and hire an expert plasterer from Germany to cover it all up, this may be the book for you. I found it amusing.
3.0 out of 5 stars
Some good stuff – Some questionable
Some of the stuff in this book is good. Much of it is a no brainer such as trees etc. If you are brand new it’ll give you some ideas. Some of it is questionable.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Great find- buy, learn and use
In 35 years of construction, I have never seen a book so well done about a topic so needing a book. The initial premise is so right on.