Tradition Hilton Head – Home of the first-ever HGTV Green Home

HGTV could have chosen any community in the country for their Green Home...they chose Tradition Hilton Head. And for good reason. Because the site they selected needed to be as special as the home itself.

Congratulations to the winner of the Green Home at Tradition, Marsha Coulthard.

"I just couldn't believe it," said Coulthard, 43, of Bradenton, a medical billing clerk at Healthcare America Medical Group. "It's the most life-changing, exciting experience I'm sure I'll ever have."

"I don't know, it's exciting and you want to live there," said Coulthard. "If you've ever viewed it online, it's absolutely breathtaking. It's eco-friendly, and that's a big thing nowadays."

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Tradition’s developers and builders are creating an environmentally responsible community that’s worthy of the advanced thinking the HGTV Green Home will display. HGTV was impressed by Tradition’s scenic Lowcountry setting featuring over 450 acres of tranquil lakes, peaceful parks and gardens, and miles of trails for biking and walking. And Tradition will be a complete town, with convenient shopping and dining, and an unmatched package of services and amenities including a luxurious Fitness Center & Spa. What’s more, each Tradition Hilton Head home will come with its own Club Car™ golf cart, providing clean, quiet transportation for all those around-town errands and visits.

 
Tradition will LEED where others follow.

Core Communities is proud to have our own Leon Carmada as a LEED-Accredited Professional. This accreditation means that Leon has a thorough understanding of sustainable construction and can manage a project based on LEED standards.

Sounds exciting…and it is! But what, you ask, is LEED? And how will Leon’s LEED accreditation benefit Tradition residents?

LEED is an acronym you might not be familiar with just yet, but in commercial construction it’s been a major influence for the last few years – and it’s starting to shape the practices of residential construction.

LEED stands for Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design. And it’s a program established by the U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC), a non-profit group composed of 10,000 member organizations from every sector of the building industry. Through LEED’s Green Building Rating System, the members are working to promote buildings that are environmentally responsible, profitable and healthy places to live and work.

There are specific LEED “roadmaps” for every type of construction including new commercial buildings and interiors, renovations, schools, retail and, more recently, neighborhood development and homes. The LEED Rating System is continually being refined, in some cases to reflect regional needs (for instance, while water conservation is important everywhere, it’s extremely critical in the desert Southwest).

LEED also includes a Professional Accreditation program to encourage green building expertise and that’s what led to Leon’s credential. The process to register and LEED-certify a building or project is a complex one and Leon also manages the team that accomplishes this task.

But LEED isn't the only green building program. For example, the National Association of Home Builders has a green building initiative that’s working to establish requirements for their members. Many other green programs outside of LEED are already in place. What’s important is not so much the specific program but the growing, widespread awareness of the many benefits of green construction.

Core Communities enthusiastically supports all of these efforts and, with the help of professionals like Leon, will continue to make communities like Tradition environmentally sensitive places that enhance both our lives and our world.

Lush landscaping greens up Tradition in more ways than one.

It’s there in the numbers. Over 1500 loblolly and longleaf pines. More than 300 oaks of various varieties. And 362 palmetto trees…along with magnolias, crape myrtles, sweet gums, red maples, red buds, loblolly bays, sycamores and bald cypresses totaling 584 specimens. And that’s just the trees!

Indeed, the count for shrubs, bushes, grasses and ornamental flowers is staggering: over 700,000 individual plants.

That’s what has been installed in the first phase of landscaping at Tradition Hilton Head, including – but obviously not limited to – the newly paved Tradition Avenue.

But in addition to the strong visual appeal, the ambitious landscape design will carry an environmental benefit for the community through the low maintenance requirements. With the exception of some ornamentals to provide some color in every season, the plants and trees used here are native to this climate zone, adaptable to this soil and very drought tolerant as well.”

Subtleties abound in the landscape design. Rather than routing Tradition Avenue directly and then landscaping along it, the road follows contours that were created in the land plan. Clusters of trees and greenery that will appear to have occurred naturally were added. Within 8 or 10 years, when these areas have matured, it will look just like Tradition Avenue had to take the course it does in order to weave around trees and vegetation that was already there.

The water to sustain the landscaping in Tradition (including the golf course) will come from treated reclaimed water from the property and from the local water and sewer authority. That helps conserve the area’s supply of drinking water, especially important as the region experiences its impressive growth.

 

Tradition National Golf Course enhances the environment for everyone.

Enlightened golf course design and management addresses many public concerns often expressed about the impact of golf courses on the environment. The Golf Course Superintendents Association of America has corrected many misconceptions.

Along with the overall land plan and design for the Town of Tradition, Tradition National Golf Course also has a role to play in making the Town of Tradition an environmentally sensitive, “green” community.

The course is planted in hybrid bermuda grass, the most commonly used turf grass in course construction and the best choice for our warm, sunny climate. It’s a thick turf that’s very resilient and it’s great in heat and drought conditions. Bermuda grass needs only two inches of water per week to stay at its best. The irrigation water for Tradition National will come from a community source of treated reclaimed water and will place no demands on the drinking water supply.

Any fertilizing needed is applied through “fertigation,” the process of adding nutrients to the irrigation water rather than spreading them in granular form. This further reduces the potential for runoff or leaching into the groundwater.

Well-managed turf grass can be an effective filtration method for both rainfall and irrigation as it soaks into the ground. Actively growing turf is also highly effective in controlling environmental pollution, such as suppression of dust, glare, and noise, as well as heat dissipation through the oxygen it produces.

The lakes and ponds within the Tradition National Golf Course have had “littoral shelves” added to them. These are shallow sloping areas near the shore for rooted water plants that aid in erosion control, create a wildlife habitat and enhance water quality. Water plants that were removed from other locations on the Tradition property have been relocated to these shelves, where they can continue their contributions to the environment.

Tradition National is also a proud member of the Audubon Cooperative Sanctuary Program for Golf Courses and is currently working toward being certified as such. The ACSP focuses on enhancing the valuable natural areas and wildlife habitats that golf courses provide while preserving the unique natural heritage of the game of golf.