Inside Third & Bond: Week 36
The main event at Third & Bond this week is working on buy-outs. As we said last week, we need to get to 75% buy-outs to draw more than an initial $3M from our construction loan. Before we have buy-outs, we need enough bids to know what is a good price and then we need…

The main event at Third & Bond this week is working on buy-outs. As we said last week, we need to get to 75% buy-outs to draw more than an initial $3M from our construction loan. Before we have buy-outs, we need enough bids to know what is a good price and then we need our CM to beat up the subs. Don’t worry, beating up takes place over the phone or in brightly lit conference rooms in which only egos get bruised.
Our buy-out issue of the week? Windows. Normally, we’d go with a high quality aluminum window. At J Condo, we went for triple-glazed to block the noise of the trains on the Manhattan Bridge. But we’re finding that the aluminum window bids are coming in 25% higher than what we budgeted. How did we under-budget by so much? Well, part of it was the NYSERDA Energy Star requirements and our goal of getting to be at least 20% more energy efficient than the standard, ASHRAE 90.1 2004. We had difficulty finding any aluminum windows that met the Energy Star rating, especially in terms of the thermal break. (Thermal break: Used to lessen or prevent the transfer of heat/cold between two surfaces—e.g., to keep the cold air outside from coming inside by traveling through a piece of metal that has surfaces both outdoors and indoors.) We considered using wood windows and cladding them in aluminum. That way we’d have our thermal break and low maintenance windows. The problem? Very, very expensive. It looked like we were at a dead end with the aluminum and the clad-wood windows so we went out on a limb and searched the Internet for vinyl windows.
We came across the Paradigm website (www.paradigmwindows.com) and watched the Meet the President video. (You never really trust your marketing people 100% when they tell you to do a video…) It was intriguing. We could tell from the video and the images on the site that these windows were a higher gauge vinyl than the spindly, bendable, white frames meant for single family houses in the ‘burbs.
When the vinyl windows were suggested at a meeting of the design team, a look of horror spread throughout the room. But given the tremendous cost difference between our budget and the aluminum windows, we really had to try to give them a fair shake. We ordered a sample window and meanwhile took a look at the design of the windows for value-engineering ideas. For example, we reduced the number of window types making it easier for the manufacturer to get us the windows we need because they can send over 15 of the same kind rather than a 100 unique windows.
Meanwhile, the sample arrived. It’s as hefty as it looked on the website and the frame can come in a wide range of colors. We sat down with the manufacturer and the installer. They were pretty good salesmen—and eager to move into the New York City marketplace. We learned that the green aspects of the vinyl window blew away the competition aluminum window. For example, the double-paned aluminum window we had specified had a U-value of 0.46 and a Solar Heat Gain Co-efficient of 0.31. (Lower the U- value—the amount of heat allowed to pass through the window—the better. Lower Solar Heat Gain Co-efficient, which lets less radiation from the sun through the window, is preferred for NYSERDA purposes. This reduces heat gain through a closed window in the summer, but also in the winter.) The vinyl windows from Paradigm have a U-value of 0.31, a Solar Heat Gain Co-efficient of 0.27. (There are other choices, more expensive, that would get us to a U-value of 0.17 and SHGC of 0.23.) They come with Low-E glass, too.
And the Paradigm window actually carries the Energy Star label, which our aluminum windows didn’t. Right now NYSERDA prefers Energy Star products be installed wherever available, but hasn’t made Energy Star windows a requirement. We had been hoping to skid through on this technicality but if we go with the vinyl windows, we won’t have to worry.
At this point, the vinyl windows looks promising but for three potential strikes against them:
1) Will our potential buyers be turned off by the idea of a vinyl windows? Even if it looks okay and feels okay to them, will they be hesitant? Will they think we are skimping?
2) The vinyl windows can’t be made at the same width as the aluminum windows. So we would have to go from a 3’4 wide window in most places to a 3′ window. The typical Brooklyn townhouse window is 2’6-3′ wide so it’s not like we’re going from picture windows to slots. But the change in the window size would also change the overall look of the façade and the arrangement and/or size of the bricks. In order to make the bricks look good, the architects lay them out so that there aren’t oddly sized pieces as the bricks come to a window or corner. Our original design used Norman bricks placed at third-bond. Norman bricks are longer than standard bricks by 5. Placing at third-bond means that they overlap by a third. According to our architects, together these decisions should result in a more dynamic looking façade. So, changing to vinyl means making a design decision… and paying the architects more to do the redesign which brings the cost of doing the vinyl windows up—though they are still less than even our original budget.
3) Because of the limitations in the width of vinyl windows, there are places where we have to do two windows instead of one big window. In order to make this work spatially, we need a mullion to go between the two windows, in addition to their frames. The window manufacturer doesn’t make these mullions but the installer says he can make them in aluminum and get them to match the vinyl exactly. This makes us nervous (and will cost more). How will it look? How will the extra work translate in the field when the window manufacturer won’t take responsibility for these pieces and the installer has issues with his mullion and the window?
We could go with the safe choice from a consumer and installation point of view, aluminum windows, and be forced to cut costs elsewhere, or we could go with the new unknown that will be way ahead in terms of energy efficiency and will allow us to keep our budget intact for other important items like sustainable wood flooring.
So, as you can see, we are on the fence about the aluminum versus vinyl windows…
Last week some of your comments came in a little late and we didn’t get around to answering them so we’ll cover that here:
Guest 5:00 – The project budget is around $30M.
Guest 9:57 Maybe… Ask us when we get there…
MrHancock The core of Hudson is around 15 employees with three principals and a fourth heading Hudson Affordable. We have many partners. Thanks for the compliment on the Rockaway homes we have some affordable houses there for sale right now… -Alison.
Inside Third & Bond: Week 35 [Brownstoner]
Inside Third & Bond: Week 34 [Brownstoner]
Inside Third & Bond: Week 32 [Brownstoner]
Inside Third & Bond: Week 31 [Brownstoner]
From our lawyers: This is not an offering. No offering can be made until an offering plan is filed with the Department of Law of the State of New York.”
I really think vinyl windows will be a REAL TURN OFF for buyers. No matter what facts you can present to them, they will still have the image of “the spindly, bendable, white frames meant for single family houses in the ‘burbs.”
Guest 12:28 — Fading at different rates is something we’ve been talking about too, but the installer insures us that the paint coating on both vinyl and aluminum pieces are the same.
Guest 12:41 — The sample is a double hung but we are actually going with casement windows (and always have been).
Go with the aluminum windows. You can’t mess with windows, everyone sees them.
Huh? Somebody call?
Biff!!! What are you doing here??? (he’s inevitably gonna show up – just havin’ some fun)
In terms of maintenance I would think that the vinyl would break down due to the UV rays faster than you could install them. I would stick with wood if aluminum is too expensive even if you have to paint them every 10 years. At least you won’t have to replace them.
The window in the picture looks like a classic double-hung.
when my co-op decided to replace its ratty, rattling and heat-leaking old double-hung windows, we switched to tilt-and-turn partly for the “coolness” factor but also because the tilt-and-turn were more soundproof and heat efficient since they lock to the frame at five points (each corner and the handle) instead of just in the center.
Have you considered changing the design of the window at all?
In fact, the only reason anyone in the building wanted to stick with double-hung was that they easily accomodate an airconditioner. Since the whole point of your building is energy efficiency, I’m assuming you’re not using in-window off-the-shelf each-tenant-buys-their-own airconditioning, so our only issue wouldn’t be an issue for you.
Thanks! Some real information about products, choices one makes while trying to balance cost of the budget and costs to the environment.
You won’t regret the use of the vinyl/alum. comby. Your buyers will, when the two materials start to fade at different rates.
And, in 15 years, when these windows need to be replaced, how sustainable will they be? You can recycle aluminum windows, no? Can you do the same with these vinyl ones? That’s just as important a consideration when choosing a “green” material.