About Philadelphia Apartments

Welcome to the Philadelphia Pennsylvania blog. This blog contains a wealth of information about Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Apartment living, and housing opportunities in our great city and other metro areas of the U.S.. Learn about efforts at restoring architectural relics of the past - former factories, warehouses, schools, hotels, hospitals, train stations - into first-class houses and apartments, and in preserving these distinguished residential communities for future generations. Please enjoy your stay on our Philadelphia apartments blog and feel free to share your stories on life in Philly and the city of brotherly love. In addition, we welcome all commentaries regarding building remodeling, home remodeling, kitchen remodeling, bathroom remodeling, and house hunting. Thank You!
Showing posts with label Home Remodeling. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Home Remodeling. Show all posts

Sunday, June 27, 2010

Pittsburgh Home to Harness Sunlight

Philly dot Com

PITTSBURGH - When Michael Merck's Pennsylvania remodeling crew is finished, sunlight that once streamed through dusty cracks in a vacant East Liberty home will strike a solar panel array capable of generating enough energy to support a family of five.

At least, that's the goal the owner of West Penn Energy Solutions set for himself in a novel bid to transform a deteriorating 100-year-old shell of a house into a Zero Energy Home , a "green" living space that produces as much energy as its occupants consume in a year.

"We want to show that we can take this great example of Pittsburgh housing stock and convert it into something as energy efficient or more energy efficient than what people are building new," said Merck, 32, of Regent Square.

Work began in March on the North St. Clair Street home and could be finished by year's end.

Merck hopes to sell the five-bedroom house for about $265,000. He'll list it for sale soon before it's finished in case a buyer wants his company to customize it.

Since minimal air will be able to enter or escape, Merck will use special wall paints and wood stains that emit little or no toxic gas. Rain barrels outside will catch water to irrigate the lawn and garden. Solar-thermal panels mounted atop awnings over two master bedroom windows will block some sunlight, yet catch enough to heat a water tank in the basement equipped with a 400-gallon reservoir. Sun-heated water will flow to showers, sinks and the wood-floored home's radiators.

Merck said the annual cost for electrical service and heating the home will be less than $300.

One drawback: No air conditioning, but a ventilation system will bring in cool, fresh air and exhaust stale air. A single window-mounted air conditioner could cool the entire house, if the owner installed one, he said.

"This really is Michael's dream and his initiative to do a net-zero energy house, and it's one of our core principles, so we're happy to be working with him on this Pennsylvania home remodeling project," said Nate Cunningham, director real estate for the nonprofit East Liberty Development Inc.

ELDI owns the house, but it has worked out a unique business deal with Merck and with two other developers: father-and-son-team Albert and Chas Suter and, separately, Thomas Bencho, who are renovating homes on North Euclid Avenue and Beatty Street, respectively.

The nonprofit purchased the vacant homes typically in economically depressed or crime-prone areas , and gave the small developers an option to renovate and sell them for a profit. Cunningham said ELDI is slowing creating a market for higher-priced homes with the goal of creating a mixed-income neighborhood of homeowners and renters.

"What we liked about them was they're not making us pay anything up front," Chas Suter said. "When we go to close with a buyer is when we pay them for the house and we pay a finder's fee."

The Suters are the first to nearly complete renovations to a house on North Euclid. Theirs is not a net zero-energy house. They preserved a stick-and-ball staircase, pine wood floors and created a master suite. The asking price is $239,900.

"It allows them to continue their mission of bringing homeownership back to East Liberty, and it allows Pennsylvania remodeling contractors with limited resources to renovate a property ... and sell it," said Coldwell Banker real estate agent Holly Sisk, who is working with the Suters.

Cunningham said a real estate market analysis shows there are few who own homes worth between $150,000 and $300,000 in East Liberty. ELDI is changing that.

Three of six homes on North Euclid that ELDI helped to build are sold or under contract. Each falls in or above that price range. People want to live near the improving Penn Avenue corridor, he said, which offers easy access to Whole Foods, Border's, Trader Joe's, a planned Target, and other retail and commercial gems.

ELDI has nine more homes it could offer to small developers.

"We are getting the pioneers now, but we are seeing a pick up in momentum from home buyers," Cunningham said.

Monday, April 26, 2010

Pennsylvania Limits Appliance Rebates

The Times-Tribune

 
 
Pennsylvanians will miss out on federal rebates for energy-efficient kitchen appliances offered through the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act. However, those replacing furnaces, water heaters or boilers can cash in.

The program - created to give Americans an incentive to dump old, inefficient appliances in favor of new, efficient ones - is funded by the federal government but administered by states. In Pennsylvania, qualifying products must be purchased on or after April 21 and are only available for residents of single-family homes.

Pennsylvania's Department of Environmental Protection opted to limit the $11.9 million of rebates to non-electric heating equipment such as water heaters, boilers and furnaces. The move has the Keystone State's appliance dealers miffed, but heating contractors and plumbers will likely be pleased. To qualify for the rebate, equipment must be professionally installed.

State officials said they wanted to focus the rebates on equipment delivering the greatest energy savings. Pennsylvania is one of just a handful of states to not include appliances in the program.

"We took a different course than other states and opted for greater energy savings," said DEP spokesman John Repetz. "A new refrigerator will save you a few dollars on your bill, but if you replace a water heater or a furnace - it means major, ongoing savings."

Other states, however, such as Michigan, New York, New Jersey and Ohio, allow consumers rebates of up to $200 on appliances, including refrigerators, ovens and washing machines.

Mr. Repetz noted that Pennsylvania utilities offer appliance rebates. However, those rebates are not as generous as the ones funded under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act. For example, PPL's rebate, which expires at the end of May, offers $50 for a refrigerator and $75 for a washing machine.

David Voitek, manager of Voitek TV and Appliance in Exeter, said the state's decision to limit the rebate denies consumers the savings they would have received on their utility bills, and denies his business the traffic it would have seen from the incentive.

"This is like taking money away from people," he said.

Mr. Voitek and other independent appliance dealers are offering their own version of the popular Cash for Clunkers rebate program to try to make up for the state's heater-only rebates.

However, Harvey Sachs, senior fellow of the American Council for an Energy Efficient Economy, said Pennsylvania's approach may maximize the economic impact of federal dollars since the state requires professional installation and local labor.

"Using this money to have local home remodelers install a furnace or water heater has a greater economic impact than a do-it-yourselfer throwing a new clothes washer in the back of the SUV and hooking it up himself," he said.

The DEP notes that heating makes up more than half the energy consumption of the average Pennsylvania household. Home heating accounts for 43 percent of total energy use and water heating, 15 percent.

Rebates for furnaces and boilers range from $200 to $500. Water heater rebates are either $100 for a conventional unit or $200 for a tankless model.

Saturday, January 9, 2010

29th Annual Philadelphia Home Show Preview

philly 2 philly

Got the Winter Blues and looking to spruce up the bathroom, redo the kitchen like you've always wanted, or maybe even venture into green technology at the house?

If so, the 29th Annual Philadelphia Home Show is the perfect place to find answers, advice and fresh ideas.

The show, which starts Saturday and runs though Jan. 24, will be held at the Pennsylvania Convention Center  and is a great place to find out what's new in home decor, remodeling trends and more.

Over 500 experts in fields related to inside and outside of the home will be on hand to offer information and more than a thousand examples of the latest products will be shown including everything from pools and spas, greenhouses, fencing and landscaping, to window treatments, interior design, antiques and carpeting.

"More so than any year before, the 2010 Show offers a variety of design experts, giving Philadelphians access to virtually every element of home design," said Alyson Caplan, show manager of the Philadelphia Home Show for Marketplace Events. "Here you have access to all you need for any home improvement project and the expert knowledge you can't find anywhere else."

The annual show is one of 27 consumer home shows, Marketplace Events puts on throughout North America, which attracts a total of 14,000 exhibitors and one million attendees in all.
This year's event will feature some of the stars seen on the popular home makeover shows including Philadelphia-born Paul DiMeo of "Extreme Makeover: Home Edition" and John Gidding of HGTV's "Designed to Sell" and "Curb Appeal."

DiMeo will be kicking off the nine-day exhibit on Saturday from 10a.m. to 3 p.m. Not only will he be available to offer money-saving tips for home and bathroom remodeling in Pennsylvania, but he'll be sharing some behind-the-scenes details of the popular show during afternoon sessions.

Another special guest, and one who works with fashion of the body more than fashion of the home, is Christopher Straub of Lifetime's “Project Runway” who appeared in season six of the show. Straub will be at the Home Show on Jan. 22 from noon to 4 p.m. to offer ways to incorporate fashion into home decorations.

And Gidding, who has experience in both architecture and urban design, will be making two appearances toward the end of the event, on Jan. 23 and Jan. 24.

Another highlight this year, includes the Designer Rooms set-up, where attendees can walk through and be inspired by staged rooms to see how some of the city's media personalities would decorate their homes as they team up with Pennsylvania home remodeling experts.

For example, 6 ABC's Jamie Apody  will have an eco-friendly living room to explore, while Comcast Sportsnet worked with Klazmer-Eiseman Interiors to design a room that the Philly sports fans will love.

Keeping up with the growing trend of "Going Green" a special area of the exhibit will be The Green Zone where some of the latest eco-friendly products from local companies will be featured.

The Marketplace is a new section this year -- an area in which shoppers can find products for the home at good prices.

Every day of the Home Show will be filled with seminars to help bring inspiration and innovation into the home. Starting this weekend, some of the sessions include how to harvest rainwater for the garden, getting started on kitchen remodeling, and lessons on furniture restoration.

Aside from samples of cabinets and floor tiles, there's also some tasty treats from local vendors. Tony Luke Jr. will be showing how to prepare his cheesesteaks on Tuesday, and Chaddsford Winery will be offering samples on Wednesday and Thursday.

Admission for adults is $12 or $9 when purchased online. Tickets for kids ages 6 to 12 are $3 and those 5 and under are free.