Not So Simple Green
Suzanne Shelton’s life work is making sustainable lifestyles attractive and accessible. She’s the CEO of the Shelton Group, a marketing company she founded in 1991 that works exclusively with environmentally focused clients. But in 2009, when she built an off-the-grid lakefront pavilion in Sharps Chapel, Tennessee, she found taking her own advice wasn’t so simple.

Growing up canoeing and waterskiing on the lakes around Knoxville, Shelton dreamed of a “little cottage to get away to.” Two years ago, she and partner Corinne Nicolas, with help from architect Brandon Pace, found a “funky piece of property” on Norris Lake, a man-made reservoir. The parcel’s peculiar rhomboid shape near the road (with just a sliver of land stretching to the water) capped any future cottage at two bedrooms, turning off other prospective buyers. But the site’s location next to a protected wetland sealed the deal for the duo.



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We discovered that solar is quite expensive. While building our LEED Platinum home we realized that we are saving so much energy just through the incorporated design and mechanical features that even if we were able to generate 75% of our electrical needs through solar it would still take almost 15 years to recover the cost of the solar system...not including the cost of its upkeep! We did have the house wired for a solar system in the hopes that some day the cost of the panels would drop to make them cost-wise for us.
A beautiful and simple structure! A very cool siding idea - allows ventilation and give playful patterns that blend into the surrounding forest.
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