How to Green-Up Your Home's Value
How to Green-Up Your Home's Value
(ARA) - Want
a good way to help protect the value of your home? Remember these
two words: green matters. Not green paint, mind you, but green
space. It's an umbrella term for the trees, lawn, shrubs and other
plantings that can affect not only the salability of your home, but
your utility bills as well.
Which is why Project EverGreen, a national non-profit organization,
is leading the charge to educate consumers about the many values of
green space -- especially as it affects their pocketbooks.
According to Den Gardner, executive director of Project EverGreen,
"research shows that improving the green space around your home can
have real economic benefits."
Protecting Home Value
Gardner cites a number of studies which show that sprucing up your
green space can help protect and, depending on market conditions,
bolster home value. For example: a study cited in Smart Money
magazine indicated that consumers value a landscaped home up to
11.3 percent higher than its base price. In addition, The Wall
Street Journal reported that landscaping investment is normally
recovered fully and sometimes doubled by its ability to increase
home value.
That sounds good, but Gardner adds this important caution: "It's
wise to plan before you plant. Make sure you begin landscape
improvement or renovation with well-thought-out ideas for
maintaining and/or improving your green space. You may want to do
the work yourself -- and that's good exercise; however, it's always
wise to seek professional advice to get the right balance and
placement of trees, shrubs, grass and other plantings."
As evidence of this he cited a research project conducted by the
Horticultural Research Institute (HRI). This showed that a
sophisticated landscape design with trees and large, colorful
bedding plants can raise the perceived value of a home between 5
and 11 percent. On the other hand, consumer reaction was that
minimalist landscapes (i.e. with small plant size and low
sophistication) actually decreased the perception of home
value.
Saving Energy Costs
Planning the right mix of trees, grass and other plantings can also
make a difference in a home's energy consumption. One study has
estimated that when properly placed to shade your home, trees can
reduce air conditioning demand by 10 to 30 percent. Another study
found attic temperatures could be up to 40 degrees lower when
adequate shade was present.
"There are two ways you take advantage of this natural cooling
effect," Gardner says. "First, if you have mature trees make sure
they're pruned properly to maximize shade benefits, and second, in
planning for future shade, seek professional advice as to the type
and location of the trees you should plant. Both steps can help
lower your electrical bill."
Also, don't overlook how maintaining a thick, healthy lawn and
other plants also provides cooling benefits. "This is due to a
process known as evapotranspiration. Gardner says. "When vegetation
is warmed by the sun it gives up water which then evaporates to
cool not only the plant itself but the surrounding area as well.
The result is one of nature's most overlooked, and yet most
efficient cooling systems. In fact, researchers have calculated
that evapotranspiration from the front lawns in a block of eight
houses, produces cooling equivalent to 70 tons of air
conditioning."
You can find more information about these and other benefits of
green space by accessing www.projectevergreen.com.
Courtesy of ARAcontent
