Above: an earth berm home
What is Green Building?
Green building is a general term describing the features of a home that relate to:
Existing Home Inspection Standards
The current InterNACHI Standards of Practice takes these issues into account to a certain degree, but the term “green” home inspection implies that the inspection will be expanded past the residential Standards of Practice to include the three items listed above. Let’s look at each of these issues in turn.
Energy Efficiency
A typical home inspection is not designed to provide information about the efficiency with which a home uses energy. Home energy use is related to the materials and methods used in building the home, its design, and the efficiency of the appliances installed.
During the course of a typical inspection, an inspector might find a condition which could lead to excessive energy consumption, such as a furnace that is short-cycling. A home inspector should mention short-cycling because it indicates a need for service of a major home appliance. Excessive energy consumption would be a secondary consideration.
Inspectors would not usually comment on what passive or active solar energy systems are installed in a home, or evaluate the effectiveness of the home's design in saving energy. Home inspectors don’t usually look at home energy bills for the past year, or measure the energy consumption of major appliances, or perform blower-door testing to determine the extent of air leakage through the building envelope.
Above: a dual-flush toilet
Sustainable Materials and Practices
Sustainable building practices and materials are those that encourage environmental responsibility and resource efficiency throughout the life cycle of a building.
Sustainable materials are generally low-energy materials. “Low-energy” means that producing the material and delivering it to the job site took less energy than conventional building materials.
For example, aluminum, by contrast, is high-energy material requiring extensive energy to mine, refine, combine, and otherwise turn into building products and deliver them to a job site. An example of low-energy building material, on the other hand, is the soil found on the job site that is used to build a rammed-earth home.
Another sustainable material is the wood from fast-growing trees where forests harvested for construction materials are replenished at a rate equal to or greater than the harvest rate.
An example of a sustainable practice would be the use of water-conserving devices in a home, such as low-volume flush toilets and water-conserving showerheads.
Above: solar thermal (hot water)
Human and Environmental Health
Certain features of homes are kinder to human health than others. Carpet may be comfortable to walk on, but it also catches and holds dust, dirt and other particulates, including allergens.
Concrete driveways and walks help keep dirt out of the home, but they prevent precipitation from soaking into the ground and recharging aquifers.
What’s an Inspector to Do?
So, what services can home inspectors provide to clients who want a home evaluated while keeping these three issues in mind?
First, inspectors can get additional training to become qualified as energy auditors. This is still an area ripe for growth for inspectors.
Above: a photovoltaic array
Confirmation of green features is an ancillary service that home inspectors can offer at little additional cost. You won’t be evaluating system performance -- just confirming that certain green features are installed at the property, according to the claims of the seller. You don’t need to invest in expensive tools, and you don’t need to make a special trip, but you can fill a special niche and add to your bottom line.