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Lifestyle

There Is a Wrong Way to Insulate Your Home

To do it right, you’re going to need a building science pro.

A scientist looking at a house with a microscope.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

When Zara Bode, a musician from Brooklyn, New York, first walked into the old seven-bedroom Victorian in downtown Brattleboro, Vermont, it just felt right. Her husband, also a traveling musician, had grown up nearby. “You walk in this house and you’re like, oh, there’s a good vibe,” she told me. Since the 1890s, when it was built, it had been a community health center and a food co-op, before being lovingly restored by the older woman who sold it to Bode and her husband in January of 2020. Bode hoped to make it their forever home, a place for friends and family to gather.

Within a month of moving in, she and her husband both lost their incomes in the pandemic. Then they made a brutal discovery: the house was ruinously expensive to heat.

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Guides

Should You Trust Zillow’s Climate Risk Data?

It’s flawed, but not worthless. Here’s how you should think about it.

The Zillow logo in disasters.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

Starting this month, the tens of millions of Americans who browse the real-estate listings website Zillow will encounter a new type of information.

In addition to disclosing a home’s square footage, school district, and walkability score, Zillow will begin to tell users about its climate risk — the chance that a major weather or climate event will strike in the next 30 years. It will focus on the risk from five types of dangers: floods, wildfires, high winds, heat, and air quality.

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