June 27, 2007

Slow Home Wants to Empower You to "Take Control of Your Home and Community"

You've heard of slow food, and maybe slow cities. Now this great post on WorldChanging is introducing us to a great site called Slow Home. The slow home concept is introduced as a counter to mass produced housing, which it likens to unhealthy and unsatisfying fast food. It presents a lot of great ideas about what's wrong with American housing, and offers a different way.

The meat of the site is a rich folio of projects, products and people that exemplify slow home concepts. There are tons of pics of great houses. I'm like a kid in a candy store clicking through them. There's even a "Slow Home TV" section with lots of cool videos. There are interviews with architects and product designers, videos of their houses, and many episodes of the "Slow Home Reports."

The site is interesting and informative. It's an instant favorite for me. I've only been able to get through a small fraction of it - there's a lot of material - but I just couldn't wait to bring it to your attention. You'll want to read the WorldChanging post, and visit the site yourself, but let me leave you with one more thing from Slow Home, the best part of all - the Slow Home "10 Steps:"

1. GO INDEPENDENT

Avoid homes by big developers and large production builders. They are designed for profit not people. Work with independent designers and building contractors instead.

2. GO LOCAL

Avoid home finishing products from big box retailers. The standardized solutions they provide cannot fit the unique conditions of your home. Use local retailers, craftspeople, and manufacturers to get a locally appropriate response and support your community.

3. GO GREEN

Stop the conversion of nature into sprawl. Don’t buy in a new suburb. The environmental cost can no longer be justified. Re-invest in existing communities and use sustainable materials and technologies to reduce your environmental footprint.

4. GO NEAR

Reduce your commute. Driving is a waste of time and the new roads and services required to support low density development is a big contributor to climate change. Live close to where you work and play.

5. GO SMALL

Avoid the real estate game of bigger is always better. A properly designed smaller home can feel larger AND work better than a poorly designed big one. Spend your money on quality instead of quantity.

6. GO OPEN

Stop living in houses filled with little rooms. They are dark, inefficient, and don’t fit the complexity of our daily lives. Live in a flexible and adaptive open plan living space with great light and a connection to outdoors.

7. GO SIMPLE

Don’t buy a home that has space you won’t use and things you don’t need. Good design can reduce the clutter and confusion in your life. Create a home that fits the way you really want to live.

8. GO MODERN

Avoid fake materials and the re-creation of false historical styles. They are like advertising images and have little real depth. Create a home in which character comes from the quality of space, natural light and the careful use of good, sustainable materials.

9. GO HEALTHY

Avoid living in a public health concern. Houses built with cheap materials off gas noxious chemicals. Suburbs promote obesity because driving is the only option. Use natural, healthy home materials and building techniques. Live where you can walk to shop, school and work.

10. GO FOR IT

Stop procrastinating. The most important, and difficult, step in the slow home process is the first one that you take. Get informed and then get involved with your home. Every change, no matter how small, is important.


I like those a lot. Not a bad manifesto. Slow Home is a site you won't want to miss. Check it out.

5 comment(s):

John Brown Slow Home Editor said...

John,
I like your site very much. I have only had time to have a quick look so far but the projects and people you talk about are refreshingly different from those found in other publications.

What kind of response are you getting from the public? In your location, are you finding that more people are becoming interested in modern and environmentally appropriate homes?
Keep up the great work and thanks for posting an article about slow home.

lavardera said...

great find John - keep it up!

Justin Anthony said...

I was wondering when someone would come up with a manifesto like Slow Food's....... I saw the Worldchanging post - it made me smile - and was going to write something about it, but it seems you got there first! :)
Good post.

John Commoner said...

Thanks guys!

John, I love your site and was so glad to hear about it yesterday.

So far I have been very pleasantly surprised by the response to my site. I'm really just blogging about what interests me, but I seen now that many, many other people share my enthusiasm for modern and green homes. I get a few hundred visits a day now, and the site is still growing really. I never thought that would happen, but since it has I'm really trying to keep it up and do my best with it. I'm really pleased that people are enjoying it. I'm certainly enjoying doing it.

I live in the Detroit suburbs, and unfortunately I see little to no evidence around me of interest in modern or green homes. The most radical thing I usually see is a McMansion with a vaguely craftsman or Frank Lloyd Wright look to (ooohhh!!! - yawn). In Ann Arbor, which is less than 20 miles away (and where I grew up), you do see far more interest in a green lifestyle, though I still don't see that embodied in the everyday homes you pass. There was a cool house featured in Dwell a while back that was built by a man who is also the City of Ann Arbor recycling coordinator. It was really nice to see that example from so close to home. There are also some UofM architecture profs that have a cool practice. I keep wanting to post about them ... gotta do it. But so far Detroit is a little dead. The deep, deep real estate slump we're in here is not helping either. It's really bad.

John Brown, Slow Home Editor said...

John,
Thanks for the background. It is so heartening to see someone like you take the time and energy to really think about houses. I find them endlessly fascinating and interesting. We are working on a way to publicize sites like yours on www.theslowhome.com I will be in touch.

P.S. - I would also be interested in learning more about the UofM architects.