Hey guys, we live in KY where weather is not really too extreme. In summer we see few days/weeks of 90+ temp and in winter besides few days of snowing, the temp usually doesn't go below 30's.
Regardless of whether we need these options or not, but I would still like to get things (futuristic/cost effective) done while the house is being built rather than regretting later on.
To start off the discussion, we are going with Geothermal for our built though. The questions are:
Sub-floor heating:
My builder talked me out of heating the garage floors/basement floor while prior to the concrete pour and I was OK with that. Having said that, I am now looking to heat the 1st floor before laying the wood/tiles, so what are my options?
Could this be tied into the Geo unit that will be going in for the rest of the house?
Solar energy:
Shall I be looking into installing or at-least be ready for the future needs?
Thanks
I have a short list of things I'm going to be doing when I ever get around to building my own house.
ICF construction, pretty much sound proof, very high r-value, natural disaster proof, and thermal mass
Individual 3/8th's pex runs to every plumbing fixture, depends on your water pressure though, might need 1/2inch for showers/tubs if you don't have good street pressure or are using a well.
Geothermal - you already have that plan seems, not sure what your asking about the first floor, but yes, run it on the first floor, everywhere.
A steel ibeam as your main beam. I look at a lot of old homes/residential buildings. The ones with a steel beam that don't have another rare and specific problem generally are perfectly level and there are no cracks in the walls, sagging floors, etc etc etc.
Cat5/6 outlets in many rooms - because wifi *****
Solar - as for solar, I don't know much about it other than it replaces your roof, but look into solar shingles. Now is the time to do it.
3 or 4 pieces of 2" PVC running from your basement to your garage (if your garage is detached). This allows you to run anything you want easily to and from your garage. When I bought my house, the awesome previous owner ran cat5, compressor lines, water lines, gas line and a 100amp feed into the garage from the basement, love it. Compressed air tools in basement with a compressor in the detached garage is great.
A ventilation fan in the basement, another great addition from my previous owner. I can refinish wood, paint, and smoke cigars in the basement, just click on the vent motor.
Non-lightweight sheetrock. All the contractors use it because nobody knows the difference. Regular weight is just stronger and mass is good.
As a former residential realtor, I saw some really cool room designs. My favorite had to be the master suite that basically was one giant room and the bathroom, closet, bed, were all exposed. Separate door and wall for the toilet.
Monoprice in-wall speakers. Nows the time to do it. Cheap as dirt and sound great. I'd put them everywhere and have your equipment zone them off.
Preselect an area for an entertainment rack, like in the basement. Run all your speaker wires there, and hdmi cables to the wall mount locations of TV's. Use an infared repeater and run that wire along with the HDMI. You could have all your cable boxes, receivers, HTPC, etc down in the basement with nothing but TV's hanging on your walls, combine that with your in-wall speakers, you have a nice setup that would be far more difficult to do after it's built.
edit:almost forgot, you can build your htpc with cable cards inside, you then forgo the need for boxes from the cable company, which as everyone knows are pricey to rent. The problem with this is not everyone can run one computer to all of their TV's with out a lot of work. You could.
Make sure they run 110 volts to the smokes and CO's, not many do this. They interconnect them so that they communicate with each other, a lot of people think they are powered but they are not. This way you don't have to change batteries constantly.
That's all I can think of right now