Emerald House
Emerald Partners
Those who made brought this vision to life
PCEH Green Team 2012 – Planning Team
Building Safety’s Jim Muir and Mike Selig Formed a Green Team to include the following partners in the initial planning process:
County Liaison
Peter DuBois ~ Clark County Environmental Services (DES)
Developer
Josh Townsley ~ Evergreen Habitat for Humanity
Builder
Jon Girod ~ Quail Homes; Bob Walton, Quail Project Superintendent
Building Design & Engineering
Timothy Buckley ~ GreenStone Architecture; Jason Stanek PE, JS Structural PLLC
Certification / Verification
Verification Liaison : Chuck Dougherty ~ Form Studio
National Green Building Standard™ / ICC700-2008 (NGBS) – Emerald level
Northwest ENERGY STAR Homes
EPA Indoor airPLUS
Kent Mitchell ~ SwiftSure Energy Services
Earth Advantage® New Homes – Platinum Level
EPA WaterSense
Ryan Shanahan ~ Earth Advantage Institute
Site Design & Landscape & Installation
Julie Christen ~ Clark County DES
Jenifer Naas WSU – Rain Gardens &
Website Project Manager & Media Relations
Julie Gorham ~ Marketing EQ
Green Building Advisor and Department Liaison
Mike Selig, Planet Clark
County Permit Liaison
Kevin Tyler ~ Clark County DES
Construction & Vendors
Chris Hiller ~ River City Drywall
Entek Heating & Cooling
Ecotape
- Gary’s Vacuflo
- Jeff Sterns ~ ProBuild
- Martin Roofing
- Parr Lumber
- Perfect Climate
- Positive Energy
- RLS Construction
- Synergy Design
- Sunbelt Rentals
Thank you for your time, effort, and resources. We couldn’t have done it without you!
Benefits
What is the impact of building and why is it important? The benefits of the PCEH House are immense, and include community benefits, economic benefits, enviornmental benefits and social benefits. Read more.
Design & Features
What is a high-performance home? The five elements of sustainable building relate to energy, health, land, materials, and water. This single-family home includes a modern and stylish look too. Read more.
Construction
PCEH was constructed to meet the criteria for five complimentary third-party certification program. In particular, the National Green Building Standard (NGBS ICC 700-2008) includes five common green building practice arenas. Read more.
Why is Sustainable Development so important?
The environment is where we live. Development is what we do to improve our lives within the abode. You cannot separate the two. In order to sustain human progress, we must build in ways that protect the environment and in that process ensure that such development will serve future generations.
Global leaders have long recognized that the development paths of our nations are unsustainable. In October 1987, the Brundtland Commission of the United Nations published a report entitled “Our Common Future,” which introduced the most commonly cited definition to date:
“Sustainable development is development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of further generations to meet their own needs.”