GREEN IS THE BUZZWORD TODAY
An Environmentally Certified “Green” $25-MM mansion is being built in Manalapan.
Frank McKinney has been building one-of-a-kind mansions in the area for the last 20 years, and is now creating an oceanfront estate that is approved by the standards of the US Green Building Council and the Florida Green Building Council. The entire project will be the subject of a documentary series. Groundbreaking is being filmed as part of this program. A scale model has been made.
The 15,000 sq ft 3-story mansion will be rooted in nature, and will feature
- thatched roofs
- water gardens
- floating sun terraces
- a waterfall spa with fire feature
- interior acrylic main floor with moving water below
- a 24’ sheer water wall with fog/smoke screen on which moving images are projected
- suspended double-helix main glass staircase
- hand-blown chandelier that mixes electricity with water
- arched aquarium wet bar to be able to walk below and view the fish above
- guesthouse made of palm and bamboo that is partially submerged in a lagoon.
“Green” features will include
- solar panels that could cover a regulation-size basketball court to generate enough energy for two average-size homes
- water system that collects enough “gray” runoff water to fill the average swimming pool every 2 weeks
- reclaimied wood amounting to saving 7 ½ acres of Brazilian rain forest
- renewable woods that regenerate every 3 years vs. every 50 years for other hardwoods
- pools, reflecting ponds, water gardens, misters and more to drop the site temperature 3-5 degrees over neighboring properties
- recycling 340,000 lbs of debris during construction
- air-conditioning and air purification systems four times better than an operating room in the Mayo Clinic.
MacKinney has written two best-selling books, and raises millions of dollars for his Caring House Project Foundation to build housing for the poor in the United States, Haiti, South America, and the Caribbean.
Governor Charlie Crist plans to reenergize the state with a mixture of solar, wind and nuclear fuel. He is expected to emphasize using renewable fuels and include mandates for reducing greenhouse gas emissions. Friday afternoon, after two days of workshops and speeches at the Florida Climate Change Summit, Crist will sign executive orders and put his plan into law. Crist has signed California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and Theodore Roosevelt IV to the bill along with various Hollywood personalities and scientists, renewable-energy advocates and environmentalists who will talk about how Florida can become more energy-efficient and use alternative fuels.
California Governor Schwarzenegger has committing his state to reducing its carbon emissions by 25% by 2020, calling for 1 million solar roofs by 2018, tightening car-emission standards and creating a multi-state global warming group and it is speculated that this will happen also in Florida.
Florida Power & Light Co., the state's largest utility, maintains that using renewable fuels and more stringent energy-conservation steps won't be able to support all of Florida's future growth.
According to an FPL spokesman, "What you have heard from the environmental movement is that we can get there through renewables or we can get there through offsetting the energy that we are demanding today. And what we're saying is that (it) will not get you there. You will still need to build power plants." Crist has praised FPL for exploring a wind power project in St. Lucie County and is ecstatic about utility regulators denying the utility's plan to build a "clean coal" power plant in Glades County.