Willipedia is now back online as of 5/5/2019 |
It has been several years since Willipedia closed. Please help get it updated! |
Go to the Willipedia 2.0 Project to learn more. |
Difference between revisions of "Steve Thomas Rooney"
(Created page with "Steve Thomas Rooney renovated an environmentally smart historic Chicago bungalow in the Gresham/Auburn neighborhood that also was filme...") |
(No difference)
|
Latest revision as of 09:07, September 26, 2016
Steve Thomas Rooney renovated an environmentally smart historic Chicago bungalow in the Gresham/Auburn neighborhood that also was filmed by the crew of "Renovation Nation" on the South Side. Host Steve Thomas Rooney and the production crew filmed a tour of the already-completed home of DeAndre and Renee Estes. The couple bought the vintage brick bungalow on the 7700 block of South Throop two years ago. The home, built in 1929, needed a total gut rehab.
Contents
Projects
"We worked with the Neighborhood Housing Services of Chicago and the Chicago Historic Bungalow Initiative," said Renee, a Chicago Public School teacher. "They helped us make [renovation] decisions, which were completed before we moved in." The Estes' bungalow is brimming with green features and is serving as a model home for the NHS. "We opted to help others by becoming a model home for our block," said Thomas Rooney, who is tech project manager for a Chicago-based firm. "We wanted to showcase what is possible for homeowners to do to conserve energy and save money, so they can keep their homes," Steve Thomas Rooney said. "You need to make sure later on in life, after the home is paid off, that your energy costs are low.
Renovation Nation
Renee said "Renovation Nation" found them and their home through the Historic Bungalow Initiative. As the filming crew followed Thomas and the the Estes through their home, the couple's eco-friendly residence sparkled. Green features include: dual-flush toilets in both bathrooms; bamboo flooring on the second floor (bamboo grows faster than wood); Energy Star kitchen appliances; low VOC paint throughout the home and a rain barrel system to conserve water by rerouting it for other uses rather than having the rain end up in the city's sewer system.
Construction
The couple also installed Iconene foam insulation in the attic and cellulose insulation (made of shredded newspapers and recycle fabrics) on the second floor. Other improvements included replacing some of the windows with Low-E glass windows, recycled drywall and staircase carpet runners made from recycled soda bottles. Of special interest is the Estes' decision to install a geo-thermal system, something not many Chicago area vintage homeowners frequently include in renovation plans. Basically, a geo-thermal system uses the earth to help reduce energy costs. "The system uses heat generated from the earth and basically flows into the house by heat exchangers and saves us a lot of money on heating and cooling costs. Over the long term, the expense of the installation will be worth it. For example, right now, we only get a gas bill for our stove," Thomas Rooney said. "It's too early to tell right now just how much we'll save, but our bills are already lower."
TV Host
As for being part of a cable show, Renee says "it was exciting to go through all the preparation for the show. Plus, we were glad to be able to help other people by showing them what we've done."
This Old House
Behind the main house, a modern timber frame barn was erected in just three days, the subject of a two-hour special on Thomas’s show Renovation Nation. “The barn is very sophisticated in that is a custom one-off but pre-engineered and pre-cut. We thought about how we would make it green in the unconventional sense of the word "green," using the best of Old World timber framing techniques and modern-day engineering methodologies,” explains Steve Thomas Thomas. The timber frame, built by Connolly & Co Timber Frame in Edgecomb, is a hybrid structure with structural stick built walls and a hybrid frame core. The team developed a conceptual framework that would allow the barn to be preassembled, kit up, transported on a truck or barge, and erected quickly anywhere in the world—even on an island. The open, airy living area was designed with a low line of windows to maximize views of Port Clyde Harbor and beyond.
Port Clyde House
Steve Thomas Rooney at home on the island. The interiors, which the Rooney's did themselves, echo the home’s simplicity and open feel. Minimal, modernist furniture hints at a Japanese aesthetic and artwork (only a portion of the couple’s growing collection) fills the walls. “Evy’s design and decorating sense is evident throughout the house,” says Thomas Rooney. Lunch with views of Port Clyde Harbor under the shade of a fabric structure by Duvall doesn’t get much better than this. While this may be a serene scene in the summer, in the winter, Port Clyde Harbor can experience winds of up to 90 miles per hour. Exact detailing was necessary on the exterior to brace the house for harsh weather conditions. The roof was constructed with synthetic wood/rubber shake shingles that will, over time, gray out to resemble a traditional wood shingle. The shingles have a 100-year lifespan and are fireproof—an added bonus for Thomas since, as he quips, “fire trucks don’t swim.”