New World Home, designer and builder of green prefab homes, just achieved a cool feat in green homes; a recent Georgia home by New World Home attained LEED Platinum-certification but without the use renewable energy sources. Devices that monitor energy consumption, an insulated moisture resistant foundation, a tankless water heater, low-flow toilets, great insulation, programmable thermostats, and more helped New World Home create a green home without the use of solar panels, wind turbines, or other renewable energy source.

One notable aspect of New World Home is the design of the homes. Take the Georgia home; while prefab, the home is old fashioned looking, and fits right into the neighborhood. Most prefabs are a little (to a lot) more modern in their design approach, which works for some people but not everyone.
According to New World Home, “A New Old Green Modular home is a newly produced home based upon historically inspired designs that are constructed with environmentally sanctioned products and practices, and are factory-built in a state-of-the-art, highly efficient manufacturing facility.”
Other perks of New World’s houses include:
- Half the energy costs.
- Reduced water consumption by thousands of gallons a year.
- A savings of thousands of dollars annually in maintenance costs.
- Homes can be erected and in move-in condition in less than 90 days.
- All NOGM New World Home designs are LEED certifiable at base level – USGBC LEED for Home certifiable (Silver, Gold or Platinum).
- Optimal Value Engineering – reduces lumber usage by 15-20%.
- 90%+ of all lumber sourced from sustainably harvested forests and 3rd party verified.
- Zero-VOC (volatile organic compound) adhesives, paints and finishes.
- Ultra-efficient HVAC systems.
- Optional alternative energy systems including solar and wind turbine.
- Recycled content products utilized throughout the structure.
- 20-50 year product warranties on many structural elements as specified by manufacturer.
See a gallery of the beautiful Georgia home below: Read the rest of this entry »














