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Would you like to live in a quality house and have low utility and maintenance bills? A house that will re-sell easily and would not have damaged the earth's ecology and natural resources? A house that will retain its beauty and value through the years? You can have this kind of house today. The Timber Reduced Energy Efficient Home is designed and built to use timber more efficiently, to eliminate the destruction of large old trees, and to utilize building materials that consume less energy overall and are less harmful to the environment. It's all in this book with many illustrations and…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Would you like to live in a quality house and have low utility and maintenance bills? A house that will re-sell easily and would not have damaged the earth's ecology and natural resources? A house that will retain its beauty and value through the years? You can have this kind of house today. The Timber Reduced Energy Efficient Home is designed and built to use timber more efficiently, to eliminate the destruction of large old trees, and to utilize building materials that consume less energy overall and are less harmful to the environment. It's all in this book with many illustrations and photographs. * * * * * Ed Paschich is an expert at building passive solar adobe homes in the high desert of the American Southwest. Paula Hendricks is a well-known writer and photographer. Her own line of museum quality notecards featuring her photographic images are sold internationally.
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Autorenporträt
Ed Paschich, artisan and master custom builder, is the owner of Passage Construction Company, Inc., in Corrales, New Mexico. Passage Construction consists of Ed, his father, Jack, and other family members. Jack grew up in an adobe home in Columbus, New Mexico, and dreamed of building modern adobe homes. Ed learned basic construction in Austin, Texas. In 1976 Ed and Jack formed Passage Construction, and have been building passive solar adobe homes in the high desert of the Southwest ever since. Ed's impetus for his latest contribution to sustainable architecture are his two children-actually all the world's children-who must learn to live and build lightly on our Earth.