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Sustainable Home Design Mitigates Climate Change

Sustainable Home Design Mitigates Climate Change
In Press — By Aamodt / Plumb

Sustainable Home Design Mitigates Climate Change

In the Architectural Digest article, Designers vs. Climate Change by Meaghan O’Neill, leading architects, including Stephanie Horowitz of ZeroEnergy Design and Mette Aamodt of Aamodt / Plumb Architects discuss how sustainable home design can help mitigate climate change.


Like a growing number of her peers, architect Stephanie Horowitz believes in the design community’s inherent responsibility to address climate issues. So much so that her firm works only with clients who want to build or retrofit buildings that aim for net-zero energy use.

“When we meet with potential clients, it’s a vetting process,” says Horowitz, managing director of ZeroEnergy Design in Boston. “We’re very clear that this is the way that we practice architecture—it’s not negotiable.” Sustainability-centric details such as flashing, insulation, air sealing, and decarbonization are presented on equal par with floor plans and cladding. “The way that all of these things are considered is part of the design service,” she says. “It just kind of comes with the package.”

Mette Aamodt, principal of Aamodt/Plumb Architects in Cambridge, Massachusetts, takes a similar approach. Most clients are drawn to her firm’s mission-driven work. “For others, we try to educate them and be upfront about it. Sometimes we’re going to convince people; sometimes we’re not,” she admits, “but the onus is on us to make the case.” Aamodt focuses on quality over quantity and designs built with clean, healthy materials and fair labor.

Read the full article, “Designers vs Climate Change”.

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