The Truro Residence by ZeroEnergy Design
ZeroEnergy Design, together with Silvia and Silvia Custom Home Builders, have created this contemporary house in Truro, Massachusetts.
From ZeroEnergy Design:
A client came to ZeroEnergy Design with an interesting proposition. They wanted to commission the design of an environmentally sensible beach home on Cape Cod. The trick was that they had some unusual space requirements, a narrow lot on an environmentally sensitive site, and a magnificent west-facing view.
The client can be described as a professional couple, each in different medical fields, with a large family including grown children and grandchildren. They normally reside in downtown Boston, but plan to spend their summers and weekends on the Cape. While their Boston residence accommodates some of their children, their new beach home will be the only place that will accommodate all seven of them, including their significant others and the grandchildren, thus dictating the need for an extensive number of bedrooms. The entire family will gather over the summer and on holidays, while the couple will use the home by themselves during weekends throughout the year.
Visit ZeroEnergy Design’s website - here. Visit Silvia and Silvia’s website - here.













More description from ZeroEnergy Design:
Planning for the extreme variation in occupancy was an issue the designers dealt with from the start. The home is split into a ‘Living Bar’ and a ‘Sleeping Bar.’ The Sleeping Bar is the expansion module with numerous bedrooms & bathrooms to accommodate the entire family. The Living Bar includes the living and dining areas, as well as a secondary master bedroom – all that the couple needs when the children are away. This programmatic zoning allows the Sleeping Bar to be shut down during the majority of the year to decrease energy use.
The site has a spectacular west-facing view of the water and sunset. The area of west-facing orientation of the glazing used to capture this view certainly isn’t ideal for energy performance. The narrow lot size, combined with the client’s square footage requirements and the obvious desire to be able to take in the view from the primary living space made the un-ideal orientation of the glazing unavoidable. The rest of the building envelope certainly offsets the luxury view. Silvia and Silvia of Osterville are building with double stud framing which allows a continuous layer of foam insulation (uninterrupted by studs). The geothermal system, coupled with a radiant heating system, will supply all of the heating and cooling for the year. Aside from energy efficient appliances and water heaters, ZED worked with lighting consultant Light Th!s to ensure that all of the spaces are well illuminated using energy efficient fixtures. The client also decided to minimize the home’s reliance of fossil fuels. Propane is used only for cooking. There is no natural gas.
The roof sports a large solar electric array installed by NexAmp to offset energy usage through the use of net metering. A battery back-up and energy management system from GridPoint will store electricity from the solar array to ensure the basic functions of the home through blackouts without the use of a gas-powered generator. The combination the energy efficient building envelope and systems with the solar array will allow the home to produce as much energy as it uses over the course of a year!
Choices were also made to promote healthy indoor air quality. Flooring was limited to slate, bamboo, and polished concrete, while omitting any carpeting that might capture dust, mites, mold, or moisture. The rapidly renewable bamboo flooring is bound with nontoxic glues. The insulation in interior walls and floor, used for sound insulation and to improve the performance of the radiant heating system, is formaldehyde-free. An air exchange and energy recovery system will provide clean fresh air throughout the year.
Finally, the exterior finishes will allow the home to turn a traditional Cape Cod grey and blend into the dunes. The site is vegetated with indigenous plants that prevent erosion and won’t require irrigation. They have been carefully selected by landscape consultant, Heimarck & Foglia.
Via JetsonGreen

eric on 18 Dec 2008 at 5:14 am #
Stunning design. I like even more the choices of materials and all the energy reduction and production solutions. Great, great piece.
Mycroft on 18 Dec 2008 at 7:18 am #
Looks nice - doesn’t sound cheap.
Tim on 18 Dec 2008 at 8:23 pm #
How strange, I designed something VERY similar, almost identical, about a year or two ago, for a school project in Chicago. Even the roof pitches and window alignments are the same, with the same set of stairs and the same barstool configuration. I wonder, if these people found my drawings somewhere..
Mike on 19 Dec 2008 at 7:43 am #
The design is really awesome. Nice combination of warm and natural colors. I like it very much!
holz on 19 Dec 2008 at 11:03 pm #
hmmm…
dark sky means nothing to these people?
heck of a lot of light being wasted there.
toby on 28 Dec 2008 at 1:52 pm #
Holz, are you suggesting that the windows are leaking light to the “dark sky” ? Isn’t that exactly when the lights should be on? I also hope you understand that when photographers shoot a house they often bring and set up their own lights.