As part of its
efforts to encourage water efficiency across the country, the
U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency announced that five builders will participate
in the Water-Efficient Single-Family New Homes Pilot Program. The builders will
construct homes designed to meet the WaterSense program’s draft specification
for new homes.
“Building
green means saving green
and blue,” said
Benjamin
H. Grumbles, EPA’s assistant administrator for water.
“Water-efficient homes are the wave of the future; they save water, energy and
money, and that makes sense for families seeking high-performing housing.”
Five
builders will commit to building and certifying 35-50 homes by 2009 in various
regions of the country:
Anderson Homes; Raleigh
and Chapel Hill, N.C.
Aspen Homes of Colorado; Windsor, Colo.
Cleantech
Homes; Beverly, Mass.
Dorn Homes; Tubac, Ariz.
Tim O’Brien
Homes Inc.; Waukesha, Wis.
In addition to
demonstrating the benefits of WaterSense labeled products and other
water-efficient fixtures and design features, the builders will help EPA test
the process for inspecting and certifying new homes to receive the WaterSense
label. EPA expects builders to complete homes to the draft specification and
report on the results of the WaterSense New Homes Pilot Program in early 2009.
Results will shape the final Water-Efficient Single-Family New Homes Program.
WaterSense-labeled
new homes will be designed to be at least 20 percent more water-efficient than
similar new homes being built today. Once the specification is finalized,
builders across the country will be able to earn the WaterSense label for new
homes certified to the specification. Homeowners who purchase a WaterSense
labeled new home can save more than 10,000 gallons of water per year, as well
as realize significant energy and financial savings due to the reduced amount
of hot water used. Residential water use accounts for more than half of
publicly-supplied water in the United States.
More information about the
specification can be found at
http://www.epa.gov/watersense.