Does that house come in green?

Heather Stephenson wanted the first home she bought to be green--not in color, that is, but in terms of energy-efficient features, recycled materials and healthy indoor air.

Yet when Stephenson moved from New York to San Francisco last summer, the Web entrepreneur didn't quite find an emerald city. The pickings remain slim for properties glittering with solar panels and other eco-friendly amenities.

Determined to find her green dream home, Stephenson called real estate broker Chris Bartle, president of Green Key Realty. His firm is one of several real estate agencies specializing in eco-friendly homes, and it is on the cutting edge of services providing new, green opportunities both for home buyers and realty professionals.

Bartle led Stephenson to a century-old Edwardian-era house with a south-sloping roof ideal for solar panels, and a yard ripe for an organic garden. With shops and restaurants within walking distance, the lack of a garage for her Toyota Prius hybrid wasn't a deal-breaker. Stephenson moved in this spring.

"For people who are starting to develop an interest in a 'light-green' lifestyle--maybe they're driving the SUV to Whole Foods--the home-buying process is a great place to start," she said.

Stephenson may not represent the typical home buyer, however; she is already dialed into the green scene as the CEO of Ideal Bite, an eco-friendly lifestyle tip sheet e-mailed daily to more than 125,000 subscribers.

Photos: Realtors turn green

But, increasingly, she's not so unusual either. Demand for green homes and green amenities is growing. Companies like Michelle Kaufmann Designs and Living Homes are creating subdivisions out of modular homes built in factories. Mainstream developers such as Centex Homes, Lennar and The Grupe Company have begun to integrate solar panels during the construction process; the solar panels, salesmen report, are something of a status symbol. You can even get a green luxury condo in Dubai.

Matsushita and others, meanwhile, are coming out with new lines of green appliances. Most of these companies emphasize cost, quality and cost savings as benefits: Helping save the earth is considered more of a side bonus.

Women and young married couples are driving this trend, according to reports by McGraw-Hill Construction, which cite treading more lightly on the planet and reducing energy expenses as green consumers' primary motives.

The construction industry pumps out more greenhouse gases than all cars on the road, and building and maintaining buildings consumes two-thirds of U.S. electricity, according to the Department of Energy. Greener buildings that lighten that ecological load are beginning to look more like their mainstream neighbors down the block, and less like yurts pitched in communes, circa 1968.

Green buildings make up 2 percent of all U.S. construction, according to McGraw-Hill, which predicts that 5 percent to 10 percent of newly built housing by 2010 will offer several green features. That would bring today's $7.2 billion green residential market up to $38 billion in just a few years. Yet for the near term, at least, most homeowners hoping to go green must settle on renovation nips and tucks utilizing both high and low technologies.

"The best way to be sustainable is to use existing resources instead of building new," Stephenson said.

"The best way to be sustainable is to use existing resources instead of building new."
--Heather Stephenson,
CEO, Ideal Bite

She is retrofitting her vintage home by sealing energy leaks, optimizing natural resources and reducing waste. Longer-term goals include the installation of solar panels, a solar hot water heater and a rainwater-catching system to quench the garden. Stephenson also plans to decorate with milk-based paints to help improve air quality indoors, which may be typically two to five times worse indoors than outside, according to the Environmental Protection Agency.

Stephenson credits real estate broker Bartle with opening her imagination and referring her to a noted green architect. Green Key Realty has expanded to seven real estate agents from two last year. In addition to revamping both his office and home to become greener, Bartle conducts transactions online whenever possible--a tricky feat in San Francisco, where property bids can involve 80 pages of paperwork.

"Four years ago, green real estate didn't exist in San Francisco," he said. "I thought I'd help expedite the creation of that."

Meanwhile, a green seal of approval is attracting widespread attention in some circles of real estate agents. Green Key's staff holds certification with EcoBroker, a program that teaches real estate agents to guide clients in finding the greenest potential in a property. More than 1,400 real estate agents have passed EcoBroker standards. That's small, considering the nation's 1.3 million agents, but requests from Realtors in more than a handful of states flow to EcoBroker weekly.

Realtors holding the certification may not be getting rich quickly from the green marketing angle, but many anticipate their additional skills will provide staying power. Interest in EcoBroker varies by region, with 137 certified Realtors in California, for instance, 7 in Illinois, and none yet in Louisiana.

CONTINUED: Green seals of approval...
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6 comments (Page 1 of 1)
Who cares? It's a waste of money.
by lingsun June 21, 2007 3:04 PM PDT
Trying to go green is a big waste of money. It takes forver to recoup the money, if ever. Of course, it does make a liberal feel that they saved the planet.
Reply to this comment View all 4 replies
I am Louisiana's first "GREEN" Realtor!
by sam9001 April 24, 2008 6:01 AM PDT
I am Louisiana's "Green" Realtor and to my surprise, I am the first! I have been researching this and found this article and felt it was necessary for me to respond. I am new at this and I am interested in getting as much feedback as possible from people currently in the industry... Setareh Century 2000 Real Estate setareh_mirian@yahoo.com
Reply to this comment
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