From the category archives:

Green Building

Every morning, I water our potted plants for 3 minutes. Here is how!

If you can’t see the video, click here!

My supply list! All purchased from Home Depot.

1 - Timer

100′ 1/4 inch clear tubing

7 each – 1/4″ plastic push on fittings (T’s and straight connectors)

1 – roll of 1/4″ copper tubing

1 – Box of Insulated wire staples

1 – Transition from male hose end to 1/4″ clear pipe (From timer to tubing)

Assembly: Now this is the crafty bit, here are a few steps.

1. Run all of your plastic line to proper locations first.

2. Premake all copper fittings.  I used a 1/16 drill bit to drill holes. Crimp one end of tube completely shut.

3. Install all copper fittings but leave them loose.

4. Turn on water and adjust amount of water to each head. (Using the cutting part of my linesmans pliers, I crimp the tube before my drilled holes to slow the water flow.  Don’t cut the tubing, just slowly crimp.  The goal is to get water evenly spread across all fittings.)

That’s it.  Now if you don’t think you have the skill to craft those fittings, check out Rainbirds Kit.  Much better engineering than my system, but not quite as fun.

Update: 8-24-09

Here is a picture of the plants without any handwatering through the heat of the summer.

side-porch-plants

{ 1 comment }

Green Investment

by chriscrimmins on November 22, 2007

in Green Building


I was able to attend the Green Build Conference in Chicago this November. I have mixed feelings about my experience, but there is no doubt of the positive investment it has had on me and on my company.

The conference and USGBC is still primarily targeting commercial building. The money is there, and like anything in the building world, things hit the commercial arena first. I can’t wait until it trickles down to residential homes, and I know it is on the near horizon. Leed, which is a benchmark for green building has already developed a program for homes . I am looking forward to becoming Leed accredited.

The best thing about the conference though was the capacity to define a target. Not only for the many building owners there, but also those in charge of hitting that target. I am one of those individuals that wants to direct my company towards that, towards a smarter way of building.

Conferences are just one way of investing in your company. In reality what you are doing is changing yourself. The ability to change is essential to running a dynamic company. One that excels at meeting and creating demand.

Why am I choosing this method, especially since I pride myself in working on historical homes? It seems like a departure from the methods of old. Well it is! But it goes along with the reasoning of making not only compact cars hybrids, but also making the vehicles that currently only manage to squeeze ten miles out of a gallon a hybrid. I personally have lived in a home that had a gas bill of $500 a month in the winter! It was actually a duplex, so imagine doubling that! That could probably pay for 5 homes of a better build. So what if we can reduce that in half, in a third? Just because you can budget in the cost doesn’t mean you should.

I have long held it as a priority to make the lives of those individuals that I come in contact with better. But I want that to be applied to homes as well. As professionals in our field, we are at fault for not leading. How can we demand change? We demand it in ourselves. Remember, its not about having the answers, it is in the journey.

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