New Hartford home is clean and green

NEW HARTFORD — A low-budget, energy-efficient house in town has become a stop for clean-energy buffs, who will converge for a tour next month.

Karann and Jeremy Schaller, who live on the Shady Brook Road Extension, have taken Connecticut’s Zero Energy Challenge, fitting their home with a 7.6 kilowatt grid-tied, roof-mounted photovoltaic system leased through the Connecticut Clean Energy Fund Leasing Program.

The home’s box design features an open floor plan with a cupola to release summer heat, a 3-foot thick sand earth-box heat sink, radiant floor heating and a waterless urinal. Solar hot water is supplemented with backup water, heated using a small propane on-demand Takagi.

The home is fitted with structural insulated panels, bamboo floors and salvaged wood, doors and cabinetry. Low-e windows, Hardie Panel vertical cement siding, motion sensor lights, Energy Star appliances, interior no-VOC paint and energy-efficient lighting also attest to the homeowners’ commitment to energy conservation and a healthy environment.

“It is an amazing house — there are so many energy attributes to it,†said Judi Friedman, chairman of People’s Action for Clean Energy (PACE), which is hosting an April 10 tour of the Schaller home. “These people did a lot of work themselves, and I think the financing is very good. It’s in the budget and being green.â€

Tickets to next month’s tour may be ordered online at pace-cleanenergy.org (click on Events). Tickets, including a map, will be sent to ticket holders. For ticket information, call 860-623-5487. For tour information, call 860-693-4813 or visit pace-cleanenergy.org.

Latest News

Ecology Success Stories:
A Cary Fellow’s optimism

With the ban of DDT, the bald eagle has come back from 417 nesting pairs in 1963 to 71,400 nesting pairs and was removed from the Endangered Species List in 2007.

Seaq68 via Pixabay

MILLBROOK — In today’s world of climate change worry, Peter Groffman, research fellow at the Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies in Millbrook, gave a lecture of hope for the future of the environment.

Groffman “studies urban ecology and how climate change alters microbial processes that support plant growth and air and water quality.” He is the president-elect of the Ecological Society of America and teaches at the City University of New York and Brooklyn College.

Keep ReadingShow less
Affordable housing hearing in Salisbury

SALISBURY — The Planning and Zoning Commission (P&Z) will hold a public hearing Monday, May 20, 6:45 on Zoom on the Salisbury Housing Trust’s (SHT) application to build two affordable housing houses on town-owned property on Undermountain Road and Grove Street.

The commission received the application at its April 15 meeting.

Keep ReadingShow less
Hotchkiss hosts interstate Ultimate Frisbee tourney

Luke Warner soared over the Amherst offense to swat down a pass during the Ultimate Mini-Tourney at The Hotchkiss School Saturday, April 20.

Patrick L. Sullivan

LAKEVILLE — On a soggy Saturday, April 20, eight teams competed in an Ultimate Frisbee mini tournament hosted by The Hotchkiss School.

There were teams from New York, New Jersey, Massachusetts and Connecticut. Two middle schools competed against high school junior varsity squads.

Keep ReadingShow less
Learning to compost at Kent Memorial Library

Josiah and Everett Newton with Aunt Kathy learned the importance of sorting and separating food scraps recycleables, and trash at Kent Memorial Library as part of a composting class for Earth Day.

Lans Christensen

KENT — The Kent Memorial Library and Kent Conservation Commission joined forces to bring a meaningful and educational program concerning nutrients, recycling and trash April 18.

Carol Franken of the Conservation Commission, the presenter, said one of her main composting concerns was, “How to make it meaningful to preschoolers.”

Keep ReadingShow less