Hollywood’s REAL eco-celebrities
A lot of stars claim to be green…but these guys and gals are the real deal The 90210 zip code may still be home to the massive mansions we first caught glimpses of on The Beverly Hillbillies,
but these days the Clampetts are converting their estates to green, and not the kind you roll in. It seems the Beverly Hills City Council is borrowing a page from the eco-friendly handbook by offering incentives for home owners to build or remodel in an energy-efficient manner.
The famed city also recently passed a Green Building ordinance mandating environmentally friendly requirements for commercial and multifamily developments. We can only hope that speculator Donald Trump is mindful of these eco initiatives since lately he's been snapping up several acres of properties around the Beverly Hills Hotel.
Happily, there are many Hollywood types we can count on to pave the way toward eco-conscious abodes. Take Johnny Depp - in 2005, the star converted his Bahamas island home to run on solar hydrogen technology. Depp's eco enlightenment may have rubbed off on his Pirates of the Caribbean costar Orlando Bloom. Last year Bloom built an enviro-friendly house in London."It's as green as I can make it," Bloom said on the green design Web site Inhabitat."It's got solar panels on the roof, energy-efficient light bulbs - newer technology basically that is environmentally friendly."
Ed Begley, Jr., Jackson Browne and Katey Sagal
Then there are stars that take it to the max, like musician and longtime activist Jackson Browne. His Malibu ranch home is completely off the grid, and is far from running on empty. The airy barn-style house has two loft bedrooms, two guest bedrooms, skylights and tons of windows."It's made out of masonry and rebar in a way that it stays cool all year round," Browne's live-in girlfriend, Dianna Cohen, told Living with Ed, a Planet Green series starring Ed Begley Jr.
Browne's dwelling is powered by wind turbines and solar panels; a solar-weather measuring station sits atop the property, and a well provides water."I regard this place as sort of an ongoing experiment," Browne said."I think if you set out to do it all at once, it might seem like a huge expense, but we've done it a little bit at a time." Maybe Browne can share his expertise with Dennis Haysbert (24, The Unit), who is reportedly building his own off-the-grid Malibu digs.
Everybody Loves Raymond producer Phil Rosenthal( pictures above) may not be off the grid, but his house is eco-friendly cool, replete with recycled cork floors, denim insulation and a waterless urinal. Rosenthal and his actress wife, Monica (she played Brad Garrett's wife on Raymond), even recycled the show's set furniture - Frank and Marie's kitchen table sits in their guesthouse.
Larry"J.R. Ewing" Hagman says he played the meanest oilman in the world, but in real life, he is an energy-efficient cowboy, even in his magnificent 25,000-square-foot residence. How? Hagman's home sports more solar panels than probably any other single residence. He also has retractable skylights, negating the need for air-conditioning, and claims his annual energy bill totals $13. Altruistically, Hagman's system goes beyond his own needs; he supplies solar power to five nearby lower-income homes. Actress Rachel McAdams, currently on the big screen in The Lucky Ones opposite Tim Robbins, tells People she is planning a green remodel on her newly purchased house. She might want to hit up Entourage star Adrian Grenier for tips - the posse king hosts another show, Alter Eco, on Planet Green, where he and a team perform enviro-makeovers on a surf shop, skate park, art gallery and other hip spaces.Or McAdams can check out PETA activist Alicia Silverstone's home."Everything we've brought into this house is environmentally sound," the actress told InStyle.com. But few can rival Jackson Browne's ex, actress Daryl Hannah, whose Rocky Mountain, Colorado, home is a restored stagecoach stop that operates entirely off the grid. Hannah is so hard-core green, her couch is made of mossy stone that she actually waters to keep alive.
Celebrity home designer and Holmes on Homes TV personality Mike Holmes is another go-to green tip guy. The home renovation advocate is planning to build sustainable houses in a Canadian community with features like living roofs, gray-water recapture systems, solar-assist hot water and radiant floor heating.
"I want a home that will not burn down, will not blow down, will not fall down under any circumstances, and it's really not that hard," the outspoken Holmes told ecorazzi.com."We've had, for years, the possibility of building like this. I'm just stunned that we haven't moved on it."
President Bill Clinton and actor Brad Pitt, founder of the Make It Right Foundation, pose with DeeCarla Rogers while they break ground for new homes in the Lower Ninth Ward, New Orleans.
Brad Pitt has moved on it, with Holmes as part of the team, in New Orleans's Lower Ninth Ward, which was devastated by the levee breaks in 2005's Hurricane Katrina. Pitt's goal is to build 150 homes, all designed to prevent future catastrophe by being raised three feet above ground. Besides solar panels and other enviro-friendly features, the homes will capture rainwater to reuse for gardening and toilets. Pitt's Make It Right project is being touted as the future model for our cities.
Nice to know that Hollywood has come a long way from Granny, Jed and Company and is consciously making a difference.
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