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Home Ecology
For
Roxanne and Michael Klein, living well means living in balance
with the earth. From the food they eat to the materials they used
to construct their home, the Kleins have a lifestyle that reflects
their philosophy of honoring nature.
By
Bonnie Monte
Roxanne
Klein's mouthwatering concoctions of coconut green curry soup,
daikon radish ravioli, and mocha almond fudge ice cream have helped
change the way people think about eating. Her raw foods restaurant,
Roxanne's, located in Larkspur, California, and the cookbook she
coauthored, Raw (Ten Speed, 2003), are proof that living foods
and gourmet cuisine are not mutually exclusive.
Now
Roxanne and her husband, Michael Klein, have pulled off a similarly
eye-opening feat in the realm of homebuilding: They've constructed
a house on a knoll overlooking the San Francisco Bay that artfully
melds inspiring design with sustainable materials and energy-efficient
technology. "We were committed to preserving the natural
beauty of the site," Roxanne says. "We wanted the house
to blend in with the surroundings."
The
house is a wonder of curves and angles, with multiple wings emanating
from the main building. Massive earthen columns, cast and dried
over a period of months, rise like geological formations to form
the backbone of the structure. Cascades of native plants flank
the stairway leading to the house, giving way to a pair of fish
ponds where the stairs meet the front entrance.
Inside,
the space soars, with high ceilings, tall windows, majestic views,
and light pouring in from above. The same striated earthen columns
used outside reappear indoors, complemented by an organically
shaped rammed-earth fireplace in the living room. The professionally
equipped kitchen features a built-in waterfall, a nod to the feng
shui principle of balancing the elements of fire and water. Other
feng shui elements are incorporated throughout the design, such
as generous openings into each room to promote energy flow. From
walls to floors to furnishings, the color palette is derived from
nature, enhancing the overall feeling of serenity.
Reduce,
Reuse, Recycle
Prior
to the kleins' taking ownership, the 15-acre property belonged
to late rock impresario Bill Graham, who had a modest two-bedroom
house on the site. But with Roxanne and Michael each requiring
an office, and with four children in their blended family, "the
house clearly wasn't working," Roxanne says. To remedy that,
they turned to the environmentally sensitive team of architect
Sim Van der Ryn of Sausalito, California, who served as state
architect during Jerry Brown's term as governor, and contractor
David Warner, owner of Redhorse Constructors in San Rafael, California.
The
original house was demolished to make way for a brand-new structure.
Under the Kleins' direction, virtually all debris was salvaged.
Doors, windows, and other fixtures that could be reused were donated
to nonprofits. The kitchen cabinets went to the architect's new
offices. Wood was reused as lumber whenever possible, and when
that wasn't feasible, it was chipped to serve as mulch. Concrete
was crushed and used as gravel backfill against retaining walls.
Other debris was mixed with cement and sprayed into walls for
insulation. And some prized artifacts from Bill Graham's occupancy
were retained, such as his conversation-pit table, which resides
in its original spot outdoors.
Just
as much care went into the decision about what to bring in for
the project. In choosing a material, its "embodiment of energy"
was carefully considered—that is, the amount of resources
used to produce it and get it to the site. Sometimes it made more
sense to buy a product that required long-distance shipping because
the overall impact turned out to be lower—for instance,
a nontoxic paint from Australia that's manufactured using a technique
that was popular in ancient Greece.
All
the wood brought in for framing and trim—much of it from
the decommissioned Presidio army base in San Francisco—was
either recycled or certified as sustainably harvested under the
stringent standards of the Forest Stewardship Council. "The
Kleins were very clear that they wanted no virgin wood in the
house," Van der Ryn says. Cabinets are made of recycled Douglas
fir and FSC-certified ponderosa pine. Floors are natural stone
or tan oak that were culled to reestablish indigenous connifer
growth in Northern California.
The
house is built largely of earth—rammed earth, precast earth,
and sprayed earth. "Building a two-story earth house was
filled with challenges," Roxanne says. "It was a learning
process for all concerned." Earth was selected over concrete
for its environmentally friendly nature; Portland cement contributes
to the release of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, and thus
global warming. "Its manufacture is responsible for 6 to
8 percent of global warming worldwide," Van der Ryn explains,
"because it takes so much heat to cook the limestone."
His
design strove to capture as much passive solar heat as possible
by positioning the house on the site to soak up maximum sunlight.
A radiant geothermal heat system coupled with hefty insulation
keeps the house at a comfortable 68 to 70 degrees year-round.
A sophisticated wastewater system that uses computerized valves
and leaching ponds processes gray water for irrigating the organic
gardens. Thanks to low-energy lighting, solar power supplies 60
percent of the house's lighting needs during the summer.
Living
Lightly
Another
way the kleins strive to live lightly on the earth is through
their food choices. Buying sustainably grown food and following
a vegetarian diet help conserve diminishing resources. "It's
the No. 1 thing you can do for the environment," Roxanne
says firmly.
To
supply both the restaurant and her own kitchen, Roxanne maintains
a three-acre organic garden just down the hill from the house.
Raised beds built of the same rosy-toned rammed earth as the house
hold a mix of vegetables, herbs, and edible flowers. A greenhouse
shelters bananas, papayas, lemon grass, and kaffir limes. In winter,
tomatoes and other tender crops take up residence in the greenhouse.
Four beehives supply honey. An orchard bears cherries, plums,
peaches, persimmons, pomegranates, and figs. Kiwis and grapes
twine along a fence. All of this abundance is fertilized regularly
by compost and by occasionally allowing four fat chickens to wander
the grounds.
Roxanne
herself eats only raw food—nothing heated above 118 degrees
Fahrenheit. "Above that temperature, the beneficial enzymes
in the food break down, and your body has to work harder to digest
it," she explains. She finds that eating food as close as
possible to its living state (what she calls "high-vibration")
is energizing: "When I lived in France, I had to have espresso
in the morning. Now I wake up totally ‘on.' And I have no
dip in energy during the day." She also credits her raw diet
with vanquishing her allergies. As a professional chef, though,
she has an avid interest in other cultures' cuisines and will
sample cooked foods when exploring them. But she often feels groggy
and less sharp the next day—suffering from what she calls
a "cooked-food hangover."
Besides
affecting her well-being, Roxanne finds that food heated beyond
the enzyme-zapping 118 degrees simply doesn't have the same intensity
of flavor. "I experimented with different settings on the
dehydrator. Once the temperature exceeded that number, the food's
essence changed," she says. "It needed extra ingredients
to bring out the flavor. I like to get as close as possible to
an ingredient's pure essence, to let it speak on its own in its
natural state." Still, she isn't out to convert everyone
to an all-raw diet. "I don't preach," she says. "I
encourage people to try eating one raw meal a day and see how
they feel."
For
Roxanne, her way of eating resonates with her yoga practice. "Just
like I try to come closer to the essence of fruits and vegetables,
my yoga practice is about connecting to my true self," she
says. "Nine years ago, I took my first yoga class and everything
started to unfold."
The
crowning touch to the home is the detached yoga building, connected
to the house by a covered walkway. It's here that she studies
with Devorah Sacks of Open Door Yoga in San Francisco. Roxanne
plans to add a mural to one wall. But even without that, she's
supremely contented with the house and what it represents. "All
the pieces have come together," she says. "This house
honors the expression of how I want to live on this planet."
Green
Home Resources
Bauwerk
lime-based nontoxic paints www.bauwerk.com.au
Forest
Stewardship Council www.fseus.org
Solar
Energy International www.solarenergy.org
Solar
Living Institute www.solarliving.org
Toxin-free
furniture www.furnature.com
Bonnie
Monte writes about gardens, homes, and decor from her perpetually
under-construction home in San Anselmo, California.
Source: http://www.yogajournal.com/views/1519_1.cfm# |