Solar Village Homes
Solar Village Redwood Testimonial
Boulder, Colorado
Built in 2008
3,200 Square Feet
Michelle & Jay Ferracane, Homeowners
Home sponsored by:
City of Boulder, Office of Water Conservation
The grass is always greener...
by Jay Ferracane
As soon as our first son was born, we realized that from a physical location and an eco-conscience standpoint, we were not where we wanted to be. We knew there had to be a better place, and we knew that there had to be a better way.
Our hurried lifestyle in the ever-increasingly material and wasteful environs of the Silicon Valley needed to change for the benefit of our children and ourselves. We embarked upon a series of trips to find that place. We called these our “Grass Is Greener” tours. As it happened, the “green” in our ad-hoc-titled search would turn out to have multiple interpretations, the closer we got to this new place.
We traveled across the United States, literally, trying to find the right place. After five years of searching, considering, visiting, reconsidering, second-guessing, revisiting, we found the right place: Boulder, Colorado.
This whole effort began with the future in mind—not just our own future, but that of our children. We soon realized there was an inherent consideration that we had to include in our future—the future of our greater home—the earth.
We had always done what we could to make sure our family impacted the earth in positive rather than negative ways.
Continuing to do what we could as good stewards of the earth in a conventional home clearly was not an option for us once we found the thinking, conscience, and craftsmanship that went into Solar Village Redwood. From the first time we visited the house, which was right in the middle of construction, we knew there was something special about the connection between our family, the house and the earth. Here is where our “Grass is Greener” tour took on its deeper meaning. Green is such a catchphrase these days, but it is the foundation upon which this house was built. From the materials used to the way the house sits on the lot and interacts with the earth and sun, to the way a family would inhabit it, all revolved around a core principle of sustainability. The house is more than the sum of its parts. The home is the product of a vision for a better future, seen by its creators for its new family, far before we came on the scene. Our solar home, with all its considerations of how we all fit into the world we share, makes sense.