Create an ideabook for your next remodeling project!
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| Plant conifers where they can serve as a windscreen. They'll block cold winter gusts, provide beautiful green buffer zones and prevent winds from wicking away indoor heat. |
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| While evergreens with dense foliage provide a stronger buffer, these highly structured conifers have an architectural appeal. |
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| For a clean look or for an area where foliage will not thrive, a wall might also provide a similar level of wind protection. |
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| Homes in colder climates can add warmth by placing fire features and outdoor kitchens close to the home, where the heat can permeate or serve as a buffer to colder surrounding temperatures. In this garden, the strategy provides another benefit: The structure of the home and fireplace, along with the roof, could make the outdoor space usable in colder months. |
| In warmer climates, it may be wise to place fire features and outdoor kitchens at a distance that prevents heat from enveloping or entering a structure during hotter times of the year. Design your perfect outdoor kitchen |
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by Hufft Projects
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| Trees are the ultimate air conditioners. They provide shade and can reduce temperatures underneath by as much as 20 degrees. |
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| This home's striking floor-to-ceiling windows must provide lovely daylight lighting, making it possible to cut down on artificial light. The wall of trees filters the sun, reducing glare and heat. |
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| Of course, trees can provide the same shady benefit to an outdoor garden space. |
| Hardscapes such as concrete drives and patios are known for increasing the "heat island" effect. When sunlight reflects off their hard surfaces, it reverberates, heating an area. Opting for green foliage, even at ground height, keeps a space cool. A meadow like this, especially as an alternative to a traditional lawn, is a great bang-for-the-buck sustainable landscaping strategy. It produces dramatic improvements in both indoor and outdoor air quality. By reducing the need for energy and water, it can save a family as much as $2,500 per 1,000 square feet each year. |
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| If hardscaping is necessary, it's good to know that light materials attract less heat. |
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by Woolly Pocket
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| Creating a green wall prevents structures that receive excessive sunshine from transmitting the sun's heat indoors. This wall at Los Angeles' SmoggShoppe is not just energy efficient; it is living, vertical art. Of course, if that heat is what you desire, this is not the approach for you. |
Cassy - all teasing aside, I love the ideabook. Great work!