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Chicago home hides 48 rooftop solar panels

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Photography: Christopher Barrett, Wendy Koch
Architect: Douglas Farr of Farr Associates
Builder: Goldberg General Contracting
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Michael Yannell built a 2,675 square-foot home in Chicago designed to produce more energy than it uses. It has a 10-kilowatt solar array, composed of 48 rooftop panels largely obscured by the distinctive butterfly-shaped rooftop solar panels from street view.

His gorgeously green adobe, designed to produce more energy than it uses, has other nifty design features. It’s composed of two wings connected by a foyer, entered via a courtyard. One wing has a two-story living, dining and kitchen space and the other has a den, two bathrooms and three bedrooms.

I had the good fortune to tour Yanell’s 2,675-square foot home, along with a group of about 50 architects and green building experts, while attending the recent Greenbuild conference. The private U.S. Green Building Council, which sponsored the conference, gave his project the top, or platinum LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) award.

The residence, completed last year and chosen as “This Week’s Green House,” scored a whopping 114.5 points — far more than the 90 required for the platinum rating. It has green elements throughout, from its materials with recycled contents — cardboard countertops, Oceanside tile, walnut flooring – to its Energy Star appliances, low-flow plumbing fixtures, green roof and solar power.

The combined living-dining-kitchen space has a V-shaped roof and an exterior wall or custom-made, triple-paned Marvin windows. The north-facing wall holds the solar gain with its polished concrete masonry units.

“We wanted passive solar to be a large component in heating the home,” Yannell told our group, noting the walls of custom-made, triple-pane Marvin windows on the south side that capture the rays but have large overhangs to prevent overheating in the summer. The north side, which has few windows, is mostly a plenum wall of architectural concrete masonry units that hold the solar gain.

The home has a massive 10-kilowatt solar array, composed of 24 panels on each wing. “Most people don’t even know they’re there,” said Yannell, a pharmacist at Rush University Medical Center, citing the V-shaped roof that largely obscures their view. He says they collect far more energy than the home needs in the summer, sending excess power to the grid that he draws from in the winter.

Yannell has solar thermal water heating and a geothermal heating and cooling system composed of three vertical well dug 250 feet deep.

All these features and high-end finishes didn’t compe cheap. Not including land costs, Yannell says he spent $1.6 million ($500 to $600 per square foot) on his dream home, designed by Douglas Farr of Farr Associates and built by Goldberg General Contracting.

Wendy Koch