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    Home Advertisers Ore. couple begin plans on eco-friendly home
    Ore. couple begin plans on eco-friendly home
    Andrew Burton
    Contractors
    July 1, 2010

    Ore. couple begin plans on eco-friendly home

    By DANA TIMS The Oregonian

     

    PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) — It’s a long way from the rainforests of
    Costa Rica to the verdant slopes of Clackamas County, but it’s a
    journey Chris Wille and Diane Jukofsky are on the verge of
    completing.

    After more than two decades of groundbreaking environmental
    efforts in the Latin American nation, the couple is finally coming
    home.

    Not that their ongoing work with the Rainforest Alliance — a
    leading worldwide environmental organization — will end. Frequent
    trips to Europe, Asia, Africa and elsewhere will continue, as they
    help steer exploding global efforts to preserve farms, forests and
    wildlife habitat.

    But instead of operating out of the Costa Rican office that grew
    from just the two of them to more than 40 staff members during
    their tenure, they’ll live and work in a house they are now
    building that’s every bit as green as the Clackamas County
    countryside surrounding them.

    “Our whole lives revolve around creating things that are
    sustainable,” said Jukofsky, the Rainforest Alliance’s head of
    communications, marketing and education. “We want this to be a
    model for all of that.”

    Wood stoves on two of the house’s three floors will burn
    materials gleaned from the five-acre Beavercreek property the
    couple bought last year. When combined with a heat pump and
    air-handler, the stoves will create a convective flow capable of
    warming the entirety of the dwelling’s 2,500 square feet.

    Heat that would otherwise escape up the chimney will be
    circulated through channels carved beneath the main floor’s
    concrete slab.

    “If you can heat up a big mass like concrete,” said Wille, the
    organization’s chief of sustainable agriculture, “you can keep the
    house warm for days.”

    The couple, joined by architect Kathy Bash and builder Robert
    Wood, spent a recent afternoon laying out the house’s footprint.
    They pounded in stakes marking the corners of the overlapping
    rectangles that will form the living area and looked ahead to the
    day, perhaps six months down the road, when the project will be
    completed.

    From Bash’s standpoint, the structure stands out for being equal
    parts “what a home should feel like and an energy-efficient
    building.”

    “This used to be the bleeding edge, but now it’s really the
    leading edge,” she said. “I’d like to say it’s mainstream, but it’s
    not. It’s actually pretty far ahead of that.”

    David Blackmon, the Umpqua Bank mortgage loan officer handling
    the account, agreed.

    “Their project is pretty unique,” he said. “It’s one of maybe a
    handful of truly sustainable projects being built in Portland at
    any one time.”

    For Jukofsky, the change of place couldn’t have come at a better
    time.

    “Living in Costa Rica was wonderful, but I never had a sense of
    roots there,” she said. “Here, I have a sense of home again.”

    The couple had been gone so long that family and friends stopped
    asking about a possible return date. Knowing that the Rainforest
    Alliance’s Costa Rican presence is now firmly established made the
    move possible, she said.

    However, the transition from a subtropical environment to the
    many meteorological moods of Oregon may take some time.

    Temperatures in Costa Rica’s lush central valley, for instance,
    rarely dip below 72 degrees or edge above 75. The long sunny season
    is punctuated by a brief rainy spell, but even that predictably
    provides sun-drenched mornings.

    Here, by contrast, temperature swings of 40 degrees or more in a
    single day aren’t considered extraordinary.

    “The Oregon rains will take some getting used to,” Wille said.
    On the other hand, he quipped, “This is going to be one of the last
    places on Earth to have freshwater problems.”

    As for their professional endeavors, the couple is convinced
    that the Rainforest Alliance’s work is paying off. Increasingly,
    they said, large corporations are getting the message that
    consumers care where and how the products they buy are
    produced.

    Chiquita Bananas, for instance, worked with the alliance to help
    the small farmers it buys from get their operations RFA-certified.
    The company invested five years and $20 million in the effort, but
    it’s paid off, Wille said — upward of 95 percent of the bananas
    Chiquita sells around the world now come from RFA-certified
    farms.

    Obtaining Rainforest Alliance certification is no simple task.
    It comes only after a company demonstrates that it, among other
    things, provides decent worker housing and health care, maintains
    strict control over use of pesticides and fertilizers, cleans up
    any product-caused pollution, improves the health of area soils and
    physically moves farm operations back from streams and rivers.

    Companies that have enthusiastically signed on to the effort
    include Kraft Foods, Gibson Foundation — maker of world-famous
    Gibson guitars — Coca-Cola, Nestle, McDonald’s, the JM Smucker
    Company and Unilever-Lipton Tea.

    “I once railed about ‘big bad corporations,'” said Wille, a
    self-described “old hippie.” ”But one thing that gives us hope is
    that so many companies are really catching on. They drive a lot of
    the world’s economy and working with them is critical if we are
    going to preserve critical habitat and keep so many small farmers
    in business.”

    Meantime, there’s a house in Oregon to build. Wille and Jukofsky
    are keeping their fingers crossed that Umpqua Bank’s green-building
    program will approve their loan any day. Once that occurs, they
    plan to begin construction immediately.

    The new residence is meant for the long haul, they said.
    Architectural drawings even stack the closets on the three floors
    one on top of the other, so that an elevator can be installed when
    the couples’ knees make walking the flights too arduous.

    “When people ask where we’re from, I now tell them Oregon,”
    Jukofsky said. “That’s pretty cool.”

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