It's a shine of the times
Carol
Gorga Williams Coastal Monmouth Bureau [Asbury
Park Press]

Daryl
Stone photo
Marcia Blackwell and her dog, Lucy, in the
living room of their solar-powered Long Branch home. |
LONG BRANCH -- The tan ranch house on Liberty Street does
not stand out among its neighbors -- unless you count the two large
glass-like panels that resemble skylights.
The panels are part of a solar-energy system designed to make
the equipment blend in, according to the company, GeoGenix LLC
in Rumson.
Marcia and Tom Blackwell, the owners of the home, are pleased
with the system, which makes theirs the first solar-energy house
to become operational in Long Branch, Marcia Blackwell said recently.
In fact, Marcia Blackwell has become so impressed with solar energy
that she is now helping the company that installed her system to
market itself.
"I've been talking it up so much, and I'm so passionate about
renewable energy . . . and the positive impact it can have that
I felt I should get into the business," Marcia Blackwell said.
The Blackwells will open their home to the public from 10 a.m.
to 2 p.m. Oct. 2 as part of the Northeast Sustainable Energy Association's
Green Buildings Program. Visitors will be able to meet the homeowners
and examine the system, which is used to operate all utilities
in the house except heat, which is provided by natural gas.
The Blackwell home features a 4.8-kilowatt
system that powers the washer, dryer, dishwasher and air conditioning.
Since
it began operating May 9, the Blackwells have not paid anything
to Jersey
Central Power & Light Co. for electricity.
The cost to install the roof panels and accompanying equipment
inside and outside the garage was about $40,000, said Blackwell.
But New Jersey's Clean Energy Program, which encourages the use
of clean energy systems, offers up to a 70 percent rebate, if certain
conditions are met.
That brings the cost down to about $11,000,
said Blackwell and Gaurav A. Naik of GeoGenix. The cost can be
reduced even less --
to an average of $7,000 -- if the client agrees to up-front credits
for the purchase of its so-called "green tags," credit toward renewable
energy credits the system produces, which is then sold to other
electric companies, Naik said.
Even if property owners opt not to use their green tags up front,
the system will pay for itself within seven years, Naik said.
He said the National Board of Realtors has determined that for
every dollar of annual electrical savings, property value will
increase $20.
His company has installed solar-energy systems in homes on Long
Beach Island and in Shrewsbury, Wall, Rumson, Long Branch and West
Long Branch. This year, they are installing systems in Monmouth
Beach, Middletown, Holmdel and Tinton Falls.

Daryl
Stone photo
Large panels on the roof of Marcia and Tom
Blackwell's house are part of the solar-energy system that
powers the property. The Blackwells' home is the first
solar-energy house to become operational in Long Branch,
and Marcia Blackwell is now helping the company that installed
the system to market itself. |
" This summer, we're getting twice the number
of calls we got last year," Naik said. "It's catching on."
For the Blackwells, it was an easy choice to go solar.
"We really try to live green," said Marcia Blackwell, who is also
an officer manager for a telecom company. Her husband installs
fire-suppression systems. "I don't know if that's too granola a
word. We really try to live a sustainable lifestyle. We eat green,
we grow green. We compost."
She said the rebate is what closed the deal for her.
"If someone is willing to give you 70 percent off, you go to the
next step," she said.
She went to the state Web site and chose three vendors from the
list provided. She chose GeoGenix primarily because it was local,
and she knew if something went wrong, she'd know where to turn.
She's been busy trying to get other customers, including the city
and its schools, hooked on solar. So far, she has had a meeting
with Long Branch City Business Administrator Howard H. Woolley
Jr., who admits the idea is enticing.
In the city's case, she submitted proposals for city hall and
Fire Headquarters, Woolley said.
"It looks extremely interesting," Woolley said. "At
first, I was somewhat skeptical, but I think it could make a
lot of sense."
Her next step
is the Long Branch Board of Education, which currently is embarked
on a major building program. Schools Superintendent
Joseph M. Ferraina said he is open to talking about sustainable
energy, particularly for the new Audrey W. Clark School, where
officials are in the process of choosing an architect. "I am open
to any form of energy that is cost-effective and saves the environment," Ferraina
said. "We would listen to what they have to say. I'm interested." |