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Better, Faster, Cheaper
A four-home prototype project finds a way to incorporate green building with universal design -- and help a rehabilitation center, too.
Felicia Oliver, Senior Editor
October 1, 2006
Professional Builder
The idea behind the Open Prototype Initiative — what will be a showcase of four high-quality, economically constructed homes — was to improve the way all homes are built in America. And information learned through the first home and subsequent prototype homes will also be useful for improving in-home treatment of the disabled and older Americans with a desire to age in place.
![]() It took a little longer than 20 days, but the three-story Open_1 Prototype home in Greenfield, N.H. is complete. |
The Initiative — a collaboration between The House_n Research Consortium at MIT, Bensonwood Homes and other industry professionals — will build four prototype homes — one every 18 months through 2010.
The first Open Prototype house, Open_1, was completed in August. The three-story, 28-foot by 46-foot home was built at Crotched Mountain, a Greenfield, N.H., non-profit organization that provides support services to disabled individuals and their families. The transitional home, which clients will use after leaving the organization's Brain Injury Center, incorporates universal and green design.
"The goal of the Open Prototype Initiative is to revolutionize the way homes are built, making today's extraordinary into tomorrow's ordinary," says Kent Larson, director of MIT's House_n.
© 2009, Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All Rights Reserved.










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