Monday, December 19, 2011

Featured Asheville Home of the Week

17 Ridgeway Avenue, Asheville, NC 28806



List Price: 
$425,000

New GREEN built Arts and Crafts home located in West Asheville’s popular Sunrise Neighborhood.  Surrounded by other new green homes, and with winter/spring views of downtown Asheville, this new construction craftsman home seamlessly combines green building with luxury to create a home that has both warmth and efficiency. From the imagination of Rick Thompson Architects, this exquisitely designed plan includes a master suite on the main level, entrance foyer, two upstairs bedrooms with a Jack and Jill bathroom, double layer rear deck with views, and a gourmet kitchen that opens to the breakfast nook and dining room.  Need more space? Add another bedroom, bathroom and living room in the full walkout basement.

Features include select oak floors, custom porcelain tiled bathrooms, quartz bathroom counters, granite kitchen counters, upscale fixtures, great sunlight throughout, high ceilings, garden area, gas fireplace in the living room, gas stove in kitchen, granite landscaping steps, local artist murals on upstairs closet doors, fiber cement siding, architectural roof shingles, lots of storage and HealthyBuilt™ and Energy Star ™ Certifications.  All of this in a fantastic location at the end of a private road and within a short bike ride or an easy drive to West Asheville’s Shopping District, Downtown Asheville and the River Arts District.  Contact ECO Certified Broker Mike Figura at Mosaic Community Lifestyle Realty by phone at (828) 337-8190 or by email at Mike@Mymosaicrealty.Com for more information or for a tour.


Sustainable Shelter Exhibit at the North Carolina Arboretum

A new exhibit premiering at The North Carolina Arboretum takes a hands-on look at shelter through the perspective of "home," giving visitors a chance to explore how animals and humans have adapted to different environments through a diversity of structures.
This novel exhibit reveals innovative new and ancient technologies that could help restore the health and viability of our natural world.
The exhibit is funded by a grant from the United States Department of Energy, and was developed by the Center for Sustainable Building Research, and the Bell Museum of Natural History, University of Minnesota.
Sustainable Shelter will be on display at The North Carolina Arboretum through January 2, 2012.
The exhibition will be open to the public during regular Baker Exhibit Center hours: 10:00 a.m. until 4:00 p.m. daily.
Exhibit admission is in addition to the standard parking fee ($8 per personal vehicle), and is $3 for adults and $2 for students age 18 and under. Admission and parking is always free for Arboretum Society members. To learn more, click here.
Mosaic Community Lifestyle Realty is a proud sponsor of the Sustainable Shelter exhibit.

Saturday, December 17, 2011

Asheville, North Carolina - Top 10 Most Beautiful Places in the United States



Asheville, N.C.: Majestic Scenery, Eclectic Downtown Make City a Must-See
http://abcnews.go.com

You may be more familiar with Asheville, North Carolina's natural beauty than you know. It's cascading mountains and majestic scenery have appeared in the films such as "Forrest Gump," "Hannibal" and even "Dirty Dancing." In April 2010, President Obama and his family vacationed in Asheville.

Located on the edge of the Appalachian Mountains, Asheville features a funky and eclectic downtown, more than 30 art galleries, a large culinary scene and one of the most spectacular estates ever constructed in this country.

"GMA" viewer Alan Ostmann of Candler, N.C., nominated the small city as one of "Good Morning America's" Most Beautiful Places in America.

"I live just outside of Asheville, N.C., [bordering] the Pisgah National Forest in possibly the oldest mountains on the planet," Ostmann wrote in his submission. "Four miles from my home is the Blue Ridge Parkway. The forest and parkway allow some of the most spectacular views I have seen anywhere in the world. I hike and bike the area daily and am always amazed at the beauty nature can reveal to us."

Here are three must-see places to visit while in Asheville.

Blue Ridge Parkway
Blue Ridge Parkway, dubbed "America's Favorite Drive," winds its way 469 miles through mountain meadows and seemingly endless rivers. The Parkway, which connects Great Smoky Mountains National Park with Shenandoah National Park, makes a great launching point for tourists looking to hike, bike or go rafting.

Biltmore Estate
Asheville is also home to Biltmore Estate. The 250-room mansion, built by George W. Vanderbilt and completed in 1895, is modeled after the 16th century chateaux Blois, Chenonceaux and Chambord in France's Loire Valley. The grounds of the original 125,000-acre estate were designed by Frederick Law Olmsted, the creator of New York's Central Park. At the entrance to the estate rests Biltmore Village, a unique community that offers plenty of one-of-a-kind shopping opportunities. The village has tree-lined streets, brick sidewalks, open air dining and plenty of historic homes dating back to the 1900s.

Downtown Asheville
Downtown Asheville is an eclectic mix of unique galleries, shops and food. But what's really awe-inspiring in this hub is the architecture. The city of 69,000 residents has more art deco architecture downtown than in any other southeastern city outside Miami. The Grove Arcade, a giant market built in 1929, has wine tastings and live music. A foodie will thrive in downtown Asheville, enjoying a truly thriving culinary scene.




Improving Your Home’s Indoor Air Quality: From Basic to Bigger and Better Steps

By Willem Maas
greenhomeguide.com

According to the Environmental Protection Agency, indoor air is often more than 10 times (and sometimes more than 100 times) more polluted than outdoor air. Indoor air pollutants contribute to asthma as well as other respiratory conditions and diseases. Indoor pollutants include VOCs (volatile organic compounds) from offgassing building materials, paints and finishes, and furnishings; other toxic chemicals emitted from cleaning products, pesticides, and hazardous household supplies; mold, which grows on moist materials and surfaces; carbon monoxide and nitrogen dioxide gases, which can be released from gas-fueled combustion appliances; particulates from wood-burning fireplaces or cars running near the house; tobacco smoke; as well as asbestos, lead, and radon.

Indoor air quality (IAQ) can be particularly compromised during winter and summer months when the home is more likely to be sealed tight to keep heated or cooled air from escaping.

The three general strategies for improving IAQ are:
- source control
- improved ventilation, and
- air cleaning

Source control—eliminating sources of pollution or reducing their emissions—is the most effective and should be the first step you take. Many source control options are easy and inexpensive.

Improved ventilation will improve indoor air quality by increasing the amount of outdoor air coming into your home, diluting concentrations of indoor pollutants, and pushing stale indoor air out of the home. However, some ventilation improvements may increase energy costs unless you make design changes to your home. The third strategy, using mechanical air cleaners to filter pollutants out of your indoor air, can be used to supplement source control and ventilation but it is not recommended as the sole solution.

Below is a range of tips—from basic to better to best practices—for protecting and improving the air quality in your home.  For additional information about indoor air quality and healthy homes, visit the EPA’s Indoor Air Quality website or the American Lung Association’s Health House website.
Basic Steps to Cleaner Air

These easy and inexpensive source control measures will eliminate pollution or reduce emissions from cleaning products, gas appliances, building materials, and furniture.
Clean with the least toxic product that will do the job.

The powerful chemicals in many conventional cleaning products can have a toxic effect on human skin and lungs. In addition, the propellants in aerosol products can be inhaled, so it’s prudent to use pump products instead. Find out how to make nontoxic cleaners from common household ingredients (such as vinegar and baking soda) here. Or you can purchase nontoxic or less-toxic formulated cleaning products at most stores. GreenSeal, Greenguard, and Scientific Certification Systems (SCS) certify residential cleaning products that comply with their green standards.
Avoid having your clothing conventionally dry-cleaned, or air out dry-cleaned clothing before bringing it inside.

Perchloroethylene (PERC), the most commonly used dry-cleaning solvent, is a potential carcinogen. In a report titled Hung Out To Dry, the Coalition for Clean Air recommends allowing cleaning solvents to offgas by removing clothes from the plastic dry-cleaning bag and placing them outside for four to five days. Alternatively, most fabrics that are labeled “dry clean only” can actually be cleaned through a PERC-free “wet cleaning” process that is increasingly being offered by professional dry-cleaning shops, or some can even be cleaned at home using a mild soap. For more information on alternatives to toxic dry cleaning, read these articles from Green America and Consumer Reports’ GreenerChoices.
Dispose of unused paint, solvents, pesticides, and other household chemicals promptly, and tightly close the containers of products still in use.

These products can emit harmful gases that pollute the air and may cause health problems. Minimize the use of hazardous products as much as possible. For essential household chemicals, buy them in smaller sizes that you can use right away. Earth 911 offers an easy-to-use national directory of safe disposal sites for toxic household wastes. If you need to store any hazardous chemicals, keep them in a ventilated and locked outdoor shed away from children, pets, and flame sources.
In temperate climates, use natural ventilation to cool your home.

A natural ventilation strategy relies on the buoyancy of hot air (the stack effect) and wind (cross ventilation) to increase the amount of outdoor air coming into your home. Natural ventilation can reduce total energy consumed by 10 to 30 percent compared with a home using a forced-air cooling system.

While natural ventilation is best incorporated into a home’s overall design (e.g., proper window placement when designing the home), there are simple ways to apply natural ventilation in any home: open both the top and bottom sashes of double-hung windows, and open windows on opposite sides of the same room for cross-ventilation. Opening windows at night during the summer will bring cool, fresh air inside and the thermal mass of the house will help the interior stay cool for part of the next day. The greater difference in temperature between inside and outside air at night also will cause more rapid air exchanges and vent air pollution from inside more thoroughly. In addition, outside air may be cleaner at night due to fewer cars on the road.
Use the exhaust fan over your stove to remove gases like carbon monoxide and nitrogen dioxide, and fans in your bathrooms to remove water vapor.

Make sure your gas range has a hood fan that exhausts to the outside—some exhaust systems are ductless hoods that exhaust air pulled from the stove right back into the home. Bathroom fans are also important since poor moisture management in a home can allow molds to grow. Also, if your home’s walls, doors, and windows are tightly sealed and energy efficient, you may need to open a window slightly when running an exhaust fan or when you’re using a fireplace, to avoid creating negative pressure. Without another way for outside air to replace the air leaving through the exhaust fan or chimney, air may be drawn through the exhaust pipes for your furnace or hot water heater.
Employ other simple moisture management measures to keep your home’s interior dry.

Be sure to fix any leaks and clean up any household spills as quickly as possible. Standing water and moist materials provide a habitat for mold and microbial growth (and can also attract pests).
Replace the air filter in your furnace and air conditioner at the start of the heating or cooling season, or as recommended by the manufacturer.

Filters actually become more effective in capturing and removing particulate air contaminants as they get dirtier and build up a “dust cake.” This increased effectiveness comes with a cost, however, as the pressure drop increases and less air gets through. It is a good idea to change the filter for the furnace at the start of the heating season, as the dust cake from the previous year has been sitting in the cold, dark basement throughout the summer and may have started to grow molds.
Room-size air cleaners can be effective tools for removing pollutants in one or more rooms.

If you are concerned about pollution in a particular room and it’s not possible to remove the pollution source, consider buying a room-size air cleaner. Sources like Consumer Reports and the American Lung Association recommend air cleaners for improving air quality in one or several rooms, but not for the whole house. See the EPA’s Guide To Air Cleaners in the Home for information on the various types of air cleaners.
Don’t allow smoking inside your home or around your home (near your windows or doors).

This one may seem obvious, but lest anyone forget, tobacco smoke is a pollutant.
Better Steps to Cleaner Air

These steps to improved indoor air quality are modestly priced but may require some advance planning.
Remodel in temperate months of the year, when you can open outside doors and windows to naturally ventilate construction areas without reducing energy efficiency.

During the winter and summer months when heating or cooling systems are in use, opening doors and windows will reduce your home’s energy efficiency. So if you’re doing any remodeling or home improvements that involve noxious fumes (e.g., painting, gluing, sealing), it’s best to do the work when the weather is mild and you can have doors and windows open. Direct floor fans towards the open windows to exhaust the fumes outdoors. Also, when applying emitting finishes, such as paint, remove absorptive items (such as upholstered furniture and rugs) from the room so that they don’t absorb and re-release the VOCs.
Use low-emitting, low-maintenance building materials to achieve improved indoor air quality year round.

Selecting low-VOC (low in volatile organic compounds), low-emitting, low-maintenance products can help you reduce the amount of pollution released into your home’s indoor air, thereby avoiding the need to take more drastic steps to clean dirty air. See GreenHomeGuide’s Know-How series for advice on selecting healthy flooring, furniture, paints and coatings, and insulation (formaldehyde-free). Also look for low-VOC adhesives and caulk, and pressed wood products (e.g., particleboard) that do not contain urea-formaldehyde. Greenguard, GreenSeal, and the Carpet and Rug Institute (Green Label Plus) certify building products that meet IAQ criteria.
Reduce the use of carpeting, and keep carpeting clean and dry.

Carpeting can absorb water and trap particulates and other contaminants; some types of carpeting also contain high levels of VOCs. Where possible, select a non-absorptive type of flooring. Never use carpeting in the kitchen, bathroom, laundry room, basement or other areas of the house that are regularly exposed to moisture. Areas that are carpeted should be vacuumed regularly, ideally with a HEPA (High Efficiency Particulate Air filtering) vacuum. And if carpeting gets wet, make sure that it is completely dried within 12 hours to prevent mold growth. When having carpeting professionally cleaned, you can choose a company that uses a no-chemical and low-water process.
Add a fresh air intake to your forced-air heating/cooling system’s ducting.

A fresh air intake will allow fresh replacement air to enter the house when you’re using exhaust fans or the fireplace. If you already have a ducted air system, you can add a dedicated outdoor air opening by extending the return-air ductwork to the outside. To ensure fresh air delivery, use a system with automated circulation (e.g., a fan-cycler). You may also want to install a filter in this outdoor air source to capture air contaminants such as pollen and prevent them from entering your house.
Install a whole house fan system.

A “whole house” fan system brings stale indoor air upwards and out the top of the house through the attic vents. This type of fan system also provides a good, energy-efficient alternative to air conditioning on moderately warm days. (Note: If you live in a particularly humid climate, also consider using a dehumidifier.)
Design your garage to keep vehicle fumes from entering your home.

If you’re building a new home, consider building a detached garage (or no garage). If you have an attached garage, tightly seal the wall between the garage and your conditioned space, and install an exhaust fan system that either runs continuously or uses an automatic timer linked to an occupancy sensor, garage door opener, or carbon monoxide detector. Also, do not install HVAC equipment or air-handling ductwork in the garage.
Bigger Steps to Cleaner Air

Even if you take all of the steps above, your home could still contain sources of indoor air pollution. The following are some additional technologies and strategies that may be more complex or costly to implement, but they can provide substantial improvements in indoor air quality.
Install an energy recovery ventilator (ERV) to provide a continuous supply of fresh air while minimizing loss of heat and water vapor.

This ventilation system (also referred to as an air-to-air heat exchanger) is connected to the existing forced-air heating/cooling system and uses fans to exchange stale indoor air with fresh outdoor air. Note that these systems cost several thousand dollars, so they do not have an immediate payback. This article from the University of Minnesota answers common questions about ERVs. To make sure that the incoming air is adequately filtered, select a system that has a HEPA (High Efficiency Particulate Air) filter, or a filter with a high MERV (Minimum Efficiency Reporting Value), i.e., a minimum MERV of 8 or, even better, 10 or higher.
Use a heat pump water heater to increase energy efficiency and improve indoor air quality.

Heat pumps achieve energy efficiency by moving heat around as opposed to liberating it—the heat for the next batch of water to be heated is reclaimed from the warm, humid air being exhausted. Heat energy comes both from cooling the air being exhausted from about 72° F to 42° F (sensible heat reclamation) and from the condensation of the water vapor back into a liquid (latent heat reclamation). Heat pump water heaters use 30 to 50 percent of the electricity consumed by conventional electric water heaters.

The improved IAQ stems from the moisture management aspect of this approach. The amount of mechanical ventilation provided directly matches the amount of hot water consumed. Also, because the hot water use reflects the level of human occupancy (with more people in the home, more washing occurs), the result is mechanical ventilation with heat recovery that corresponds to occupancy levels. Note: Some experts have expressed concerns about the reliability of heat pump water heater systems. For guidance on how to select the right system and have it properly installed, read this article from the Department of Energy.
Install a radiant hydronic heating system rather than a forced air system.

Forced air systems stir up dust and allergens because they heat a home by blowing heated air into it. Radiant hydronic systems heat a space by pushing warm water through tubes underneath the floor; the warm floors radiate heat, rather than pushing air and dust around. It is easiest to install a radiant heating system when building a new home or an addition, but they can also be added to existing rooms.

Monday, December 5, 2011

Davenport Park by JAG Construction


Located only blocks from the heart of West Asheville, Davenport Park is an infill subdivision of 15 home sites. It is adjacent to West Asheville Park and the proposed Rhododendron Creek Greenway. The homes range in size from 1250 sf to 1600 square feet. There are currently eight houses either completed or under construction. Seven of these houses are either sold or pending. This neighborhood is a short walk to the bustling small business district of Haywood Rd, and only a few blocks from the interchange of I-240 and Brevard Rd. We are building a dynamic community of conscious and empowered individuals and would love for you you to be a part of it.

Click here for a virtual tour.

For more information on available lots and available house plans please contact us (828) 216-0914, or contact our realtor Mike Figura (828) 337-8190 at Mosaic Realty

Visit our listing page for Davenport Park Homes

Saturday, December 3, 2011

Family Photoshoot for Christmas

Invitation open to all friends, clients and
associates of Mosaic Realty, a proud Community Partner of The NC Arboretum.


WHAT: Mosaic Realty and our brokers welcome our friends, clients and associates to come to The North Carolina Arboretum this Sunday, December 4th for:

1) A free digital professional family or portrait photo in front of the stone fireplace in the Baker Exhibit Center

2) Free family admission for the day to The NC Arboretum

3) Free family admission to the Sustainable Shelter Exhibit (exhibit hours 9am to 4pm)

WHEN:  Sunday, December 4th.  Photos taken from 1-4 PM.  Come earlier to view the Arboretum's gardens and exhibits.

WHERE:  The North Carolina Arboretum Baker Exhibit Center

HOW: RSVP by calling Mike Figura at (828) 337-8190 by Saturday, December 2nd, to register and to sign up for a photo shoot time. Your name will be included on a list at the Arboretum's front gate for free entry.

Thursday, December 1, 2011

Featured Home of the Week

58 Bartlett Street, Asheville NC 28801
List Price:
$219,000.00


Immaculately kept and charming Arts and Crafts home in one of the most convenient neighborhoods in Asheville. This home offers tons of natural light, a renovated kitchen, a new bathroom, tall ceilings and solar hot water panels.  New efficient windows, new gas furnace and updated electrical. Relax on the spacious covered Southern style front porch and enjoy your meals on the large back deck with mountain views. The gently sloping yard is perfect for kids, pets and gardening.  Within an easy walk to the River Arts District and Downtown, the owner of this house will experience the best that city living in Asheville has to offer.  For more information, contact Broker Mike Figura at (828) 337-8190 or email him using the contact form.  MLS# 509101

Directions: From Downtown Asheville, take South French Broad to left on Bartlett. Home on right.  From the River Arts District, take Bartlett to home on right.

Tuesday, November 29, 2011

A Welcome to Our Blog

A Welcome to Our Blog


Welcome to the Mosaic Realty Blog, an exciting online gateway designed to share informative articles about sustainability, green homes, buying and selling homes in the Asheville, North Carolina area.

Thank you and enjoy,
Mosaic Realty Staff