From the category archives:

Miscellaneous Schmidt

I was reading the paper the other day about home pools, a household icon of the 50’s that still plagues neighborhoods today.  Don’t get me wrong, I like to swim, and lounging by the pool, partaking in the occasional ogle, isn’t the worst way to spend a hot afternoon.  No, I am talking more about the home pool, the chemical filled holes in the backyard that are used not nearly as much as people thought they might, like a nice pair of Manolo shoes or an Armani suit.

There are 958,000 public and private pools in the state of California.  If a tiny pool uses 30,000 gallons to fill, that is at least 285,000,000,000 gallons of water at any given moment, and that is a low number since many many pools are bigger than thirty thousand gallons.  How many millions of gallons of chemicals to keep that water “clean”?  How many of those pools are left to fester and become breeding grounds for mosquitoes?  Now in some places, where it is oppressively hot I can see why you might want one – but wanting isn’t a good enough reason when talking about sustainable living.  The environmental costs for private pools are huge.  Pools no longer add to a home’s value like they may have 30 + years ago.  With so many other options, like beautiful new public pools, the home pool just doesn’t make sense for sustainable builders.  How do you justify the costs in terms of water use and pollution?  I just do not see it.

And on to fireplaces.  Another fixture of the modern home, who doesn’t love a nice fireplace?  Well, me for one.  Honestly, ask yourself when was the last time you actually used the thing?  I think people like the idea of a fireplace far more than the actual fireplace itself.  Maybe its the primal nature of the thing, maybe it reminds us of some distant past when we needed a fireplace to cook and keep us warm, maybe its nostalgia…

But hey, it is an item whose time has past.  Given the efficiencies available in modern HVAC systems, coupled with the really excellent insulation options now available, fireplaces are just very last century.  I am not going to even go down the whole “Burning things is bad” argument – rather I am going to just talk about the space itself.  If you are doing a remodel, ask yourself if you need that space?  Oftentimes the fireplace dictates how a room flows, restricts how you arrange your furniture, how you use a room, and for what?  The one or two times a year you might take a match to the palace, if even that much?  I find fireplaces to be a waste of space.  They unbalance a living room, dictate focal points that don’t need to be there and limit your flexibility, all of which runs counterproductive to the most efficient use of a space, which is one of the keys to sustainable living.  So if your doing a remodel, here is a radical idea, ask yourself if you really need a fireplace, does it really add value to the home, or are you better off without it?  The planet is, of that I am certain.

Share

{ 0 comments }

I was with my kids over the weekend at a Track & Field meet for the San Francisco CYO (Catholic Youth Organziation) – fun fact about Mr Sustainable, he Coaches Track and Cross Country at Saint Ignatius…anyhoo I am at the meet watching 3rd through 8th graders run, throw and jump and I was struck by how great they all were.  Rising CO2 levels were not on their plates, for them it was the sheer joy of testing their athletic abilities, seeing how far, how was, how long.  Youth really is a gift, though I disagree with George Bernard Shaw’s flippant “youth is wasted on the young” line.  When we age we shoulder our responsibilities as we rightly should, and if we can buffer our children from the malestorm for a time, so be it.

While I clearly feel this blog is the finest on the planet, this morning over my light & sweet java I was revisiting Grist – a damn fine site for green news on topics other than building, and I was impressed.  I havent a clue how the newspaper industry turmoil is going to shake out, but I suspect that places like Grist, Huffpo, and SustainableSchmidt will probalby be the future of new news.  If nothing less a lot of trees won’tbe chopped down for newsprint.  Now if only someone smarter than me can figure out how to save the jobs of these really top notch journalists and support staff and get their excellent content here as primary source material, that would be something.

Share

{ 0 comments }

My garbage bill came the other day, and I was looking over the flier they sent with it.  It makes me proud to live in San Francisco, as our garbage/recycling/composting program is very impressive.  I pay $24.76 a month, and I am satisfied.  Garbage and waste disposal is a fundamental global urban problem – some landfills like Fresh Kills in New York are so massive they can be seen from space.  Proper disposal is one major key to sustainable living.  Here are some benchmarks that the city and county of San Francisco has achieved over the last 20 years of work:

1989: Curbside recycling starts in SF

1995: SF exceeds the state mandate of 25% waste diversion from landfills

2000: City meets state mandate of 50% diversion from landfills

2001: City adds residential and commercial composting (green carts) and changes the old blue bins to new blue carts; items accepted for recycling continues to expand.  My black cart starts getting really light!

2006: SF City ordinance mandates that all Construction & Demolition debris be sorted by a registered facility that can process mixed waste and divert a minimum of 65% from the landfill.  SF Achieves 70% landfill diversion.

It is an impressive and only partial list.  Composting is the really bright spot as it is processed and reused by local agriculture, as opposed to some of the recycled items that get shipped overseas for processing.  Too bad we don’t have someone clever here who can figure out a way to make money by turning paper into insulation LOCALLY.  I bet that person would not only save the planet, make a good living, and employ people, he or she would also become a paragon of virtue, be envied by the community, and even get a profile here at SS…

Here is a great guerrilla video to end on =)

Share

{ 0 comments }

Memorial Day (AKA Veteran’s Day) doesn’t get enough press imho.  Considering how much has been sacrificed by so many for our country and our future, too much time is spent on BBQ’s and shopping sprees at the local big box and not enough time spent on serious reflection.  We have waged so many wars in the few hundred years of our existence as a nation, some by choice, others without choice, yet in each the dead pile up and watch the living move on.

Global climate change is no war, but the threat it poses us as a nation and as a species is fundamental, intrinsic, and may well lead to our extinction.  How do we serve those who have sacrificed their lives by pissing away the very world they fought for?  Over consumption, poor urban planning, unsustainable pressures on our environment and resources will eventually overwhelm us, unchecked their will be no one to tend our graves as we tended the graves of our fallen soldiers this past weekend.

Hyperbole?

Maybe, but I am in a hyperbolic mood after watching flag draped coffins and considering what it means to be an American.  If carbon levels continue their unchecked rise, as they have risen year after year since measurement began in the 1950’s, there won’t even be wood left for our coffins, nor people left to memorialize us.  Will future remnants of our generation look back and curse our greed and insatiable consumption?  I think it is likely.

Unless…

You & I get off our lazy asses and get to work.  No day goes by my eyes that I am not presented with choices to make the future better.  To use less, to purchase smartly, to build sustainably.  Every act of creation contains some seeds of destruction, and the creaton of our homes needs to recognize this and ask how that destruction can be minimized in each and every step of the way.  I saw some friends of mine with a jack hammer just this morning going to work on a cracked driveway, and I asked them to use high concentration flyash concrete.  It can be as easy as that.

Share

{ 0 comments }

My Alma Matter, Saint Ignatius College Prep, is just across the street from one of my projects, 2139 39th Ave.  I was lucky enough to be asked by some of the faculty at the school to showcase the project to their students.  One young man posted last Friday in the about section, and I wanted to repost it here in the front since it made my week.  I feel inspired by young people like Sam, they will be left with our legacy.  We have a moral imperative to see to it that that legacy is not a ravaged planet.

Hi Mr. Schmidt
My Nature Nexus class at had a great time touring your house.
Nature Nexus provides students, like myself, an opportunity to discover the problems that exist on our planet.  All year we have studied the effects of human actions and how they impact the Earth.  We study many topics ranging from the O’Shaughnessy Dam to the farmers’ markets and how they support local farmers.  The class is designed to teach students three essential ideas necessary to live a healthy life: a sense of place, interconnectedness, and stewardship.  We put these lessons to work on a barren 25 square parcel of land in front of the West Sunset Community Garden.  Our class restored the area to what it might have looked like 300 years ago. We planted Seaside Daisy, California poppy, Dune Knotweed, and yarrow donated to us from a local nursery.
I found that a local garden helped me understand and connect top my native surroundings, and the work felt great to accomplish.
We have recently visited Helmut Schmidt’s remodeled house in the Sunset near our school.  He has transformed this building into a sustainable and earth friendly house.   Our future style of living thrives in Helmut Schmidt’s house; everything from the solar panels to the cork flooring this type of sustainability is necessary for our future generations.  My classmates and I agreed that green architecture that will boom in the near future.  One of my classmates is planning to study green architecture in college, and I plan on studying finance to help fund future green projects.  Mr. Schmidt inspired me to hope for a greener more sustainable future.

thanks for the tour
sam

Share

{ 2 comments }