The Toledo Blade Online
The Toledo Blade OnlineThe Toledo Blade Green Edition
Click here to subscribe or renew!
Temp: 25°
Humidity: 86%
Tuesday, 02/09/10
Click Here Click Here Click Here Click Here Click Here
Home »   Latest News »   Regional News » 


Click to Receive RSS Feeds!EmailPrint IndexHelp FacebookTwitterDiggDel.icio.usFark

Article published September 29, 2005
House a model of energy efficiency
Ohio Solar Tour is Saturday
Ralph Semrock, whose goal is energy self-reliance, mounts the earth-bermed rear of his home.
( THE BLADE/ANDY MORRISON )

When we last checked in on Ralph Semrock almost a year ago, two or three dozen visitors who had grown weary of rising energy bills stood in awe in the basement of his largely unfinished and totally unconventional home in rural Ottawa County.

From thick Styrofoamlike wall insulation to radiant heat he now has coming up from beneath his basement's seven-inch-thick floor, Mr. Semrock went down the list of his futuristic home's $35,000 worth of energy-tight features.

Called Solterra - a hybrid of words that mean "sun" and "earth" - his house is one of the featured attractions of Saturday's third annual Ohio Solar Tour, sponsored by Green Energy Ohio.

Many other residences on the tour - including Gov. Bob Taft's mansion - will focus mostly on how solar panels can be incorporated into an existing design to help offset heating-fuel needs.

Mr. Semrock predicted he would someday fulfill his dream of becoming nearly self-reliant for power, weaning himself off electricity provided by FirstEnergy Corp. for all but the nonpeak times for harnessing wind and solar power.

That day may not be far off, though Mr. Semrock and his wife, Leah, won't really know how close they are until they're settled in early next year.

Ralph and Leah Semrock are serious about saving energy. Solar panels are visible on the roof of their house.
( THE BLADE/ANDY MORRISON )
They expect to have the interior of their Allen Township home, 10 miles east of Oregon on Curtice EW Road, done by year's end.

But Mr. Semrock said the house actually generated more energy than it used in June, July, and August, though the summer was one of the hottest on record. Because of Ohio's net-metering law, the utility must compensate him at least partially for putting more energy on the grid than he used.

For June, his credit was 67 cents. For July, it was $2.25. He doesn't know the August figure yet but is sure it'll be in his favor.

That won't make him rich. But given that people with comparable-sized homes had electric bills of $200 or more for those months, Mr. Semrock is thrilled.

Mr. Semrock estimates it'll take him 18 years to pay off his investment at today's rates. But he said it'll be worth it because of his "altruistic" views on alternative energy.

"I want to prove to people this does work," said Mr. Semrock, an Owens Community College professor who owned a solar energy business from 1978 to 1981.

He said Solterra will show how homes built from scratch can have several aspects of energy efficiency in their design.

From the outside, it seems the kind of place where hobbits from J.R.R. Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings might have chosen to live if the classic Middle Earth fantasy was set in modern times. Three of its four sides are earth-bermed. It has its own wind turbine and solar panels.

The Semrock home, the governor's mansion, and others on the Ohio Solar Tour must be open to the public for tours one day a year because state grant money from the Ohio Department of Development was used to offset the cost of installing solar panels or other devices.

For the first time, northwest Ohio will have a number of guided tours, starting at 9 a.m. Saturday at the Center for Development and Training on the Owens campus. Eighteen sites will be open.

A University of Toledo bus that runs on biofuel will shuttle people to the First Solar manufacturing plant in Perrysburg Township, then to three area residences, over to UT, and back to Owens.

Self-guided tours between 1:30 and 5 p.m. will include the Semrock home and that of a First Solar employee, Sylvania Church of Christ, and the state's first commercial-scale wind farm, near Bowling Green. Admission requires $5 for a tour book. Couples and families may get in on the $5 tour by sharing books, Jessica Belcher, northwest Ohio's event organizer, said.

Registration is required. To sign up, call Jessica at 419-575-2686 or e-mail her at jessica@greenenergyohio.org.

Information also can be obtained at an alternative energy workshop being co-hosted on the UT campus by Green Energy Ohio and the university. Scheduled to last five hours, the workshop begins at 8:30 a.m. tomorrow at UT's former EISC building at 2600 Dorr St. Residential and commercial perspectives are to be offered.

Contact Tom Henry at:
thenry@theblade.com
or 419-724-6079.


Permanent Link

 RECENT RELATED ARTICLES

Horses face long road to recovery after ordeal | 02/07/2010
Students flip for fund-raising goals to top $10,000 | 02/04/2010
Volunteers assist neglected horses in Ottawa County | 02/01/2010
Ohio law change next in forming 1 police district for Ottawa County communities | 01/20/2010
2 arraigned in Ottawa County on marijuana charges | 12/25/2009
1 person dies in Ottawa County crash | 12/24/2009
Ottawa County woman held in robbery of Toledoan enters not-guilty plea | 12/24/2009
Ottawa County to recount results of 2 elections | 12/02/2009
Pharmacist was man of year in field | 08/28/2009

Blade Area
Updated: 11:12 am
Driver hurt when Monroe school bus collides with vehicle >>
Blade Area
Updated: 11:12 am
Officer says 33 dogs seized from suspected puppy mill >>
Cops/Courts
Updated: 11:12 am
Swiergosz sentenced over police standoff >>
Education
Updated: 11:10 am
Northview principal gets words of support >>
Cops/Courts
Updated: 11:09 am
City League sports events postponed; county library branches closed
VIEW SCHOOL CLOSINGS >>
Blade Area
Updated: 9:45 am
Waterville may put $4 trash fee on ballot >>
More news stories
 



click here!

ADVERTISING SECTIONS
Tom Henry
Updated: 7:13 am
Playing the odds can help mitigate disasters >>

S. Amjad Hussain
Updated: 5:53 am
France draws line over Muslim women’s dress >>

Marilou Johanek
Updated: 5:54 am
Sense of superiority drove church to 'help' Haitian children >>

Jack Kelly
Updated: 5:42 am
As Democrats schmooze, Obama’s credibility slides  >>

Jack Lessenberry
Updated: 5:32 am
Granholm failed to make case in last Michigan address >>

Rose Russell
Updated: 6:09 am
Even in South Africa, pols' private affairs are people's business >>

David Shribman
Updated: 9:37 am
Love means never saying budget deficit >>

Mike Sigov
Updated: 12:31 pm
Russia's president brings little to the table >>

Tom Walton
Updated: 5:40 am
Apologies in politics are unprecedented >>

More columnist stories
MOST READ STORIES
1.  City League sports events postponed; county library branches closed
2.  Toledo officials given raises up to 26.9%
3.  Officer says 33 dogs seized from suspected puppy mill
4.  Bryan man held for failing to stop for airport security check
5.  Weather check, radar and roads
6.  Northview principal gets words of support
7.  Movie Gallery chain to shut 7 area stores
8.  Study links autism to mother's age
9.  Swiergosz sentenced over police standoff
10.  Knights' Cromwell steps down
MOST E-MAILED STORIES
1.  Tennis champ accused of phone harassment
2.  Toledo strip club puts cover charge into quake relief
3.  Mental health agency looks to pare $3.5M from services
4.  Homelessness board votes for outside audit; advocate Ken Leslie safe for now
5.  Sylvania lawyer charged in thefts from 2 clients
6.  'Stagecoach Mary' broke barriers of race, gender
7.  MAC basketball struggles with fall from elite
8.  Clyde plans to generate electricity from trash
9.  Equine devotee faces 42 counts of animal abuse
10.  Students, staff navigate Perrysburg High School halls in wheelchairs


AP  News Headlines



AP  Business Headlines



AP  Sports Headlines


AP  Features Headlines
Copyright 2010 The Blade. By using this service, you accept the terms of our privacy statement and our visitor agreement. Please read them.
The Toledo Blade Company, 541 N. Superior St., Toledo, OH 43660, (419) 724-6000
To contact a specific
department or an individual person, click here.
The Toledo Times ®