- Home
- Maintenance
- Energy Conservation
Lean and Green
CHP (combined heat and power) is a marriage of electric generation and thermal
power—the use of an engine, usually gas-fueled, to simultaneously generate electricity
and heat. It can be done on a grand scale, as in manufacturing, hospitals and
residential districts—or less massively, in condominium developments. As successive generations of
systems emerge, CHP has become a leading option for lowering condo expenses.
CHP generators are small—lean, green, and smart—but they take a big whack out of energy costs.
Read More
Choosing Your Energy Source
Public utility companies like NSTAR and National Grid are going the way of Bell
Telephone, which for over a century was simply “the phone company,” the sole provider of telephone communications delivered over its vast infrastructure. Now, of course, we buy
our service from any of a number of telephone providers which use the lines Ma
Bell laid.
Read More
LEEDing the Way
Real estate professionals, developers and builders are all reporting the same thing: today’s homebuyers who are looking for maximum value are asking for more than granite countertops and hardwood floors – they want energy savings and green buildings. Read More
The Greening of New England
We diligently sort our recycling. We drive our hybrids to the nearby market to
buy locally-produced organic food. We are looking for ways to live more
harmoniously with the planet. Real estate developers have carefully noted this
trend, and many have been building new “green” energy-efficient condos as well as retrofitting existing units to decrease
their impact on the environment. Read More
The Hot and Cold of It
Utility submetering is the implementation of a system that allows a condominium
association or other multi-tenant property to bill tenants for individual
measured utility usage by making use of individual water, gas, or electricity
meters for their relevant utilities.
Read More
Getting Away from Gas
When it comes to being green, New England’s condos have gone far beyond recycling bins. They’re doing everything from recycling water and switching to cleaner
propane-powered gasoline lawnmowers to installing bike racks and walking
trails.
Read More
Green in Real Life
As Kermit the Frog once sang, it’s not easy being green. In many cases, going, “green” for condominium units (which can encompass a wide range of practices) comes with paperwork, additional maintenance, and, least appealingly, increased cost.
Read More
"Green" Carrots
Because they are relatively large and must maintain sizable common areas, condominiums have been hit particularly hard by rising energy costs. But because they are shared ownership communities, and because they often share walls, condominiums are also well-suited to benefit from utility or government-sponsored energy conservation programs, as well as green technology upgrades. Read More
Button Up
Winters these days don’t seem to be quite as brutal as they once were, due in part to the fact that in
recent years, the Northeast has had more flooding and ice storms than
blizzards. But pipes still freeze in the dead of night, and winter conditions
still take their toll on New England homeowner associations. Carefully-planned
landscapes can be brutalized by winter, with trees and other plantings damaged
or killed by the weather.
Read More
Green Myths
Mom was right.
Her admonition to “turn out the lights when you leave the room” is as valid today as it was a generation ago. And yet many condominiums today, while energy-conscious in so many ways, seem to feel it’s better to just leave the lights on – sometimes, 24/7.
Read More
