cover image Prefabulous + Almost Off the Grid: Your Path to Building an Energy-Independent Home

Prefabulous + Almost Off the Grid: Your Path to Building an Energy-Independent Home

Sheri Koones. Abrams, $24.95 (240p) ISBN 978-1-4197-0325-6

This attractive coffee-table–style book, the third in Koones’s Prefabulous series, features 32 prefabricated houses that, to a greater or lesser extent, boast environmentally friendly, efficient, and renewable-energy elements. Koones’s definition of “almost off the grid,” which she considers the optimal amount of energy independence, is “a minimal need for energy use from the utility company, while also presenting the possibility of returning energy back to the grid.” She also wants to debunk the myth that prefabricated houses are “all double-wides and ugly little boxes”; in fact, the homes shown are architect-designed and stylish, although they run the gamut of pricing, styles, and luxury, from the modernist house in Newport Beach, Calif., and the steel-framed Snowhorn House engineered onto a cliff in Austin, Tex., to the Charlotte, Vt., Habitat for Humanity ART House. Each entry begins with lists of information about the house and its builders, “green” aspects (which include building materials such as low-flow faucets and recycled-content countertops, and lifestyle amenities such as walking distance to town), and “energy” aspects (such as solar heating, LED lights, and triple-paned windows). Unfortunately, some essential information—most notably, with a few exceptions, building costs—is missing. (Oct.)