The English Residence by ZeroEnergy Design
ZeroEnergy Design, a Boston based architecture and energy consulting firm, has designed the English Residence, located in the town of Orleans, Massachusetts.
Full description after the photos….


















The English Residence by ZeroEnergy Design
ZeroEnergy Design designed this residence to replace the original building but remained true to the family traditions that have developed since the land was purchased in 1958. Back then, as a botanist and a world class statistician, the client’s parents each followed the academic calendar enabling them to spend summers on the cape in rental home. Being conservation oriented, they planned to tread lightly on the property – imagining self sufficiency and living with the land in the simple, modern structure they would eventually commission.
Over time, that original house became a central hub, the place to connect with international family members, and the most consistent place they all considered home. The entire family loved art; between pieces collected from their world-wide travels and those developed by the amateur painters in the family, art was always an integral part of the house. The new home offers year round living and continues the legacy of a modern artistic home, treading lightly and focusing on the outdoor environment. New features include the clean, green feeling throughout the house, healthy indoor air quality, very comfortable and stable temperatures from the radiant floors, and exceptional energy performance with renewable energy systems. And, the artist family members immediately felt that the new home’s bright red, orange, and cedar colors really ‘made the house’.
On the ground level, an open porch provides indoor/outdoor living with safe, step-down decking as stairs, which can also be used as seating for larger family events. A roof deck on the second level of the house offers the wonderful feeling of living in the trees, with a glass rail to open the view and an outdoor kitchen for entertaining. Abutting the roof deck is a lush, living green roof built to fill the view with green vegetation at eye level while seated, as well as provide insulative value, energy savings, and reduce roof run-off from storm water. The second level rooftop reveals 2.5 kilowatts of solar electric panels which provides ~30% of the home’s electricity.
The master bedroom features views of the lake through the trees, an open style walk-in closet, and a full bathroom with a double length sink and a deep soaking tub. Awning and casement windows on opposite sides of the bed, two at floor level and one near the ceiling, encourage passive ventilation with cool air on hot summer nights.
A wide open living space functions as the ‘heart’ of the home, with areas for relaxing, dining, and cooking. Recessed cabinets float off the floor and hide a vast pantry within the wall. Open shelves inspired by the client’s admiration for Julia Childs offer quick access to dishware. The generous counter space provides ample working area for food prep, stool seating for everyday use, and. a built–in wine rack to cradle each vintage.
The construction of the home features specialized hurricane-resistant structural reinforcement and windows for coastal storm conditions, spray foam insulation in the wall cavities, rigid foam to eliminate thermal bridging, and a mix of fiber cement and cedar siding on the exterior for long term durability and low maintenance. Flooring finishes consist of rapidly renewable bamboo in the living areas, travertine tile at the entries, and recycled glass tile in the bathrooms, and FSC certified Garapa decking on the porch & roofdeck.
Construction for the home was completed by Cape Associates of Eastham, MA. This project is ENERGY STAR Certified, and has been registered with the USGBC LEED for Homes program in an effort to achieve LEED Gold certification.
Visit the website of ZeroEnergy Design – here.
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Michael M on 02 Dec 2009 at 6:39 am #
The tile details in the bathroom look out of place in the home. However, I dig the rest of it.
robin holland on 02 Dec 2009 at 7:00 pm #
the house is cool, the photography is excellent!
robin holland on 02 Dec 2009 at 7:01 pm #
also, nice art!
Tere on 02 Dec 2009 at 7:33 pm #
Oohh I love the colors in the bedroom.
Lisa on 02 Dec 2009 at 8:25 pm #
Absolutely adore the red/orange combo. I also love the slanted roof deck, outdoor kitchen, and the living green roof. Bravo!!
burt on 05 Dec 2009 at 1:42 pm #
Love the front door…where can you get one?
Blandwagon on 08 Dec 2009 at 12:02 am #
It’s nice for once to see a beautifully designed house that isn’t owned by multi-millionaries.
Apson on 19 Dec 2009 at 12:24 am #
I’m curious what cement board siding that is – it almost looks like plain 4×8 sheets caulked in the joints and painted…I think it looks great and I like the layout pattern.
Apson on 23 Dec 2009 at 11:18 pm #
Perhaps it’s HardiePanel smooth in true red? It looks like it could be a rain screen except for the caulking.
Nigel on 29 Jan 2010 at 7:57 am #
Great for the architectural design, BS for “zero energy design” if the 2.5kW solar panels can only provide 30% of the home’s energy requirements. Perhaps geothermal would have been a smarter (and cheaper) choice in MA given the fewer solar hours over the course of the year compared to more southern latitudes.
Just goes to show that LEED means next to nothing for building energy efficiency and green design.
Frances in Mexico on 04 Feb 2010 at 8:35 pm #
I really enjoyed touring this wonderful home. It truly treads lightly on the property. The land seems similar to the mountains around my city (Cuernavaca) but we don’t have extreme weather. I have seen hundreds of houses and house plans and this one in particular is excellent. Soon I will be building my own home and I am looking for something like this…we have more than 300 days of sunshine a year and a 4 month rainy season…most of the time it is 2eternal spring” Congratulations to the homeowners and designers.
ajsmith on 22 Feb 2010 at 2:59 pm #
Energy efficiency seems like a scam at times. This house has square design with open floor plans. It’s not that impressive. The bathroom has semi-modern fixtures with sterile feel. The design firm seems to be pretencious?
Dano on 26 Feb 2010 at 12:04 am #
very well executed — i could easily live in a place like this!