A team of Philadelphia-based green building visionaries have joined efforts to build a LEED certified home for $100K. After experiencing frustration at the lack of available modern, green, affordable homes, developer Postgreen, Interface Studio Architects and building company Level 5 Construction have set out to construct a 1,000 sq ft home for $100 per sq foot, and get it LEED certified.
Related Posts
-
Interface Studio Architects, who gave us the 100K house, is upping the ante in sustainable prefab building by designing a new 72 unit LEED-certified apartment
-
The U.S. Green Building Council received an early Earth Day present last week, as the 10,000th green home was granted LEED certification in Tacoma, Washington.
-
This month we’re welcoming a brand new builder to the prefab scene as Method Homes launches its first house! The wood clad wonder is currently
15 Responses to “Mission Possible? LEED Certified Homes for $100K”
-
Featured Author
2012 Pritzker Prize Awarded to Wang Shu – First Chinese Architect to Win the Award
Curved House is a Modern Residence with Distinctive Sustainable Strategies in Missouri
Sugarhouse Studios Pop-Up Cinema & Workshop Encourages Community Interaction in London
Luxurious Floating Home Makes the Most of Its Small Footprint on Lake Union in Seattle
This author's twitter feed is currently unavailable. Please try again later.
-
Read Inhabitat
-
Search Categories
-
Recent Posts
-
Recent Comments
-
Browse by Keyword
follow inhabitat on:
popular today
all time
most commented
more popular stories >
more popular stories >
more popular stories >
© Inhabitat.com 2012 | About Inhabitat | Contact Us | Advertising with Inhabitat | Terms Of Use | Privacy Policy | Inhabitat, LLC





















I’ll take one! The only problem right now with going green for most people is the up-front price.
I don’t understand why a $100K house will be sold for $200-250K…?
it is possible with steel SIPs that can be left un finished on the exterior
http://www.southernsips.com
They will be sold for 200-250 because they will have land under them, plus no one asked the builder not to make money on the project. I think it’s a great idea, it’s something I’ve been trying to accomplish for a while. Way to go!
leafpure – The $100K only covers the hard construction costs. We also need to cover the cost of the land and the many soft costs that go into developing in Philadelphia. Also, the corner house will cost more than $100K to build, so it will be sold closer to $250K…
Well done! The exterior can be worked still I suppose, looks like a 30\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\’s bauhaus project. But WHY it will cost 200-250K? when the whole idea was 100K? is that the land cost? Or just a amrketing trick? Or maybe the same idea withh 100 USD laptop for African kids which first costed 300 and now sells for around 500.
For clarification, the sale price of the houses is $200-250K because it includes the cost of the lot and a little extra for the team involved. I believe the blog says they bought each lot for around $100K.
I love the interior’s!
I really like the concept of being able to build a home more affordably. I guess by the time all is said and done, the house will work out to be about $200-250 a square foot.
This is pretty awesome and things like this will help to save Philly.
If only someone would/could do this in Rockaway, NY
Would those small windows provide enough daylight/view?
i want one!!!
250 doesn\’t buy you kitchen cabinets or any closets? How about a staircase or ladder to get up to that nice flat roof?
As a licensed contractor and construction consulting professional I am always amazed at how otherwise very intelligent people have no concept of risk/reward and the development time and cost associated with getting a dream/idea/concept/plan/project from A to Z. “Why the cost increase from $100K to a sales price of $200-250K?” Well, the hundreds or thousands of hours invested up front away from family, friends and healthful recreation must be worth something! More specifically, these inventors have real costs and usually fork over their hard earned savings while there is no income from a speculative venture. In addition to land cost, and construction cost, they have had the permits, city fees, plan reproduction cost, and survey costs and inspection costs and still after these direct costs probably make only a 10-20% before tax profit (maybe it is tax exempt). In the end they need a bit of cash left over to start their next wonderful plan and program. Hats off to this group of astute architects, engineers, designers and business people for taking the risk. CONGRATULATIONS – VERY IMPRESSIVE INDEED.
Seems as if it’s finally intending to get warm again … It truly was obviously a wild winter this year on county. Is seems that spring time won’t come subsequently… Awaiting summer time months ahead !