When thinking about how to choose a sustainable place to live, your home’s location can be as important as how the house is built.
The sustainability of one’s home depends as much (if not more) on its location as on how the house is built. If you’re looking to buy land, or to buy (or rent) a house, consider sustainability criteria when comparing the locations of different properties.
How to Choose a Sustainable Place to Live
The following are some of the key “location efficiency” issues to consider. (Some of them only apply to buying land that you plan to build on.) Try to choose a spot that meets at least some of these criteria.
What to Look For: A Property That…
What to Avoid: A Property That…
- …is within a floodplain zone; on a known earthquake fault; or on coastal land that’s susceptible to erosion or in a tsunami zone;
- …is a Greenfield site (i.e., land that has never been developed /built on before);
- …contains sensitive habitat, endangered species, wetlands, or prime agricultural land (unless you preserve the key areas for continued agricultural use or conservation, whichever is applicable); or
- …consists of steep slopes (often defined as slopes with a grade of 15 degrees or more), which would need to be substantially graded to enable development of the site. The grading and development of steep slopes can cause soil erosion and increased stormwater runoff, which in turn can cause water pollution, flooding, and potentially mudslides.
Living in a sensible and sustainable location has numerous benefits. You can reap significant financial savings (e.g., by reducing the amount of driving you have to do; or by avoiding or minimizing the need to build new infrastructure or to do extensive site grading). Location efficiency can also yield broad, collective benefits for society and our shared environment, such as: reducing sprawl-related automobile dependence,
- traffic, and air pollution;
- protecting public health, environmental health, and the climate;
- conserving natural resources, habitat, and open space; and
- contributing to the creation of livable, walkable, healthy, and vibrant neighborhoods that enhance your community’s quality of life and local economic opportunities.
Miriam Landman is an accomplished writer, editor, and sustainability advisor with expertise in green living, green building, and sustainable communities. For daily links to sustainable solutions and success stories, connect to her Facebook page for The Green Spotlight.