Italianate Victorian Green Home of Noe Valley in San Francisco

13 Jan 2010

It means that the lovely little Italianate Victorian Green Home Design and construction of this Noe Valley Victorian transformed into green home paradise, include a great deal of care and thought. This Italianate Victorian Green Home in the heart of Noe Valley in San Francisco was stripped and restored to its original appearance on the facade, but with significantly redesigned upgrades and modernization inside. The property completely remodeled with four bedrooms and baths. A seamless combination of Green Home construction and modern design. This included committing to enviromentally suistainable practices during initial demolition. The original floor was used as a sub-floor for the new green home. Wiring was recycled. via

Italianate Victorian transformed into green home paradise

Italianate Victorian transformed into green home paradise

Italianate Victorian Green Home master bedroom

Italianate Victorian Green Home master bedroom

Italianate Victorian Green Home living fireplace

Italianate Victorian Green Home living fireplace

Italianate Victorian Green Home kitchen space

Italianate Victorian Green Home kitchen space

Italianate Victorian Green Home master bathroom

Italianate Victorian Green Home master bathroom

Italianate Victorian Green Home living outdoor

Italianate Victorian Green Home living outdoor

The project was undertaken by the developer-owners as a fully sustainable and “green design”, including a wide variety of features from Solar Photovoltaic system, to 3-stud corners, to construction waste recycling. With Group 41’s help, the approvals process and Historic Preservation reviews went smoothly, and the developers were able to sell the house the very day it came to the marketplace during the “bottom” of the economic downturn in mid-2009.

Particulary in the case of large-scale remodel’s, buyers have come to expect a laundry list of suistainable features – low – VOC paint, solar panels, recycled denim insulation – to ease their consciences as they part with a different kind of green. The finished product is a spectacular marriage of form and function. Colvin’s aim was to maximize the home’s utility, wich meant such tasks as eschewing walk-in closets, drawers and cabinets, and employing great rooms for public spaces rather than using a floorplan of small, divided living area.

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