Passive Houses
Posted: 27 December 2008 02:35 PM   [ Ignore ]
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A New York Times article on the Passivhaus.

...The concept of the passive house, pioneered in this city of 140,000 outside Frankfurt, approaches the challenge from a different angle. Using ultrathick insulation and complex doors and windows, the architect engineers a home encased in an airtight shell, so that barely any heat escapes and barely any cold seeps in. That means a passive house can be warmed not only by the sun, but also by the heat from appliances and even from occupants’ bodies.

And in Germany, passive houses cost only about 5 to 7 percent more to build than conventional houses.

Decades ago, attempts at creating sealed solar-heated homes failed, because of stagnant air and mold. But new passive houses use an ingenious central ventilation system. The warm air going out passes side by side with clean, cold air coming in, exchanging heat with 90 percent efficiency.

“The myth before was that to be warm you had to have heating. Our goal is to create a warm house without energy demand,” said Wolfgang Hasper, an engineer at the Passivhaus Institut in Darmstadt. “This is not about wearing thick pullovers, turning the thermostat down and putting up with drafts. It’s about being comfortable with less energy input, and we do this by recycling heating.”

There are now an estimated 15,000 passive houses around the world, the vast majority built in the past few years in German-speaking countries or Scandinavia…

So much ‘green’ technology and technique is just sitting around waiting to be used. It’s bizarre.

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Posted: 27 December 2008 03:55 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 1 ]
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Especially considering how old passive solar is.

The apartment I’m in now is built 100% wrong.  The long axis is north to south instead of east to west, so our un-insulated back porch gets the most sun...and there’s only 2 windows along the entire south side otherwise.  Only humans are dumb enough to build without taking reality into account.

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Posted: 27 December 2008 03:57 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 2 ]
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Along the same theme, here’s a great collection of Urban Design Principles I recently came across that beautifully explains how to build saner, better cities:

http://www.residentialdesignguide.co.uk/chapter4designprinciples.html

I’m also really enjoying going through the Edible Forest Gardens 2nd volume which is all about design + practice....their library of “patterns” has been really mind-changing stuff.

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Posted: 04 January 2009 04:32 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 3 ]
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thirtyseven - 27 December 2008 03:57 PM

I’m also really enjoying going through the Edible Forest Gardens 2nd volume which is all about design + practice....their library of “patterns” has been really mind-changing stuff.

Sweet!  I just had that out yesterday, storming my brain with things to consider while designing our veggie garden.  Starting with the idea of mandala, morphing into fractal spirals, and now dendritic paths lined with keyhole beds.  Naturally, in real life, it will never be so orderly.

I have a copy of A Pattern Language, which is mostly city, village, neighborhood, homesite, and house patterns.  Have you seen the Permaculture Designer’s Manual?

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Posted: 05 January 2009 04:53 AM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 4 ]
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^^Haven’t, no.

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Posted: 23 February 2009 10:43 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 5 ]
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As a side benefit, you would probably not have any household pests, either. More of these, indeed.

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Posted: 06 February 2010 04:16 AM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 6 ]
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hiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii,

Soaring energy costs, rapid climate changes due to greenhouse gas emissions, and the demand for high indoor air quality all call for effective solutions from the building sector. With unparalleled super-energy efficiency and superior air quality, Passive House design also provides a solution that puts true carbon-neutrality within reach. Today.

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Posted: 14 June 2010 12:10 AM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 7 ]
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We recently attended the Passive House conference in Illinois. Passive House refers to a rigorous but voluntary standard for super energy efficient buildings.  The standard focuses on “passive solar design” (i.e. balancing solar energy gains and losses), super-insulation, advanced window technology, air tightness, and ventilation.

The increasingly popular Passive House design, referred to as Passivhaus in German, was pioneered in Germany and Austria, with more than 15,000 passive houses and other large buildings already built. The design does not need to be complex, but it does involve knowledge of heat loss by conduction and air leakage through the building.  The results are a home (or building) with high insulation values, extremely high performing windows, and strict airtight requirements.  According to an article in The New York Times last year, a passive home uses approximately one-twentieth the heating energy of a home roughly the same size.

Choosing the windows in Passive House design impacts the overall building performance.  Windows in a Passive House should be highly efficient with super insulating frames and glazings that are “tuned” to the climate.  Choosing glazings that maximize solar gain in the winter and minimize it in the summer can effectively achieve these goals.  Super tight windows with tested (ATI) air and water infiltration numbers as low as possible are also ideal in Passive House design.

For the First Carbon Neutral Urban Homestead in the US, the Nauhaus Institute (NHI) has designed the Nauhaus Prototype (NHP), an ambitious project that includes passive solar and super insulation technology which meets Passive House Institute US (PHIUS) standards, and uses uheat exchange ventilation, locally sourced materials, on-site renewable energy production, and edible landscapes, food production and animal habitat.

A key component of the NHP is the inclusion of SeriousWindows 925 super insulating, fiberglass framed casement and awning windows, and fiberglass framed doors.

Clarke Snell, Executive Director of the Nauhaus Institute, said, “We selected SeriousWindows from Serious Materials because they were the only US manufacturer that we could find that could allow us to reach the high-performance specifications required for Passive Haus certification. Not only can they meet the spec but they look great.”

A recent blog post by Loadingdock5 Architecture discusses the hunt for the right passive house window.

Serious Materials manufactures highly efficient, high performance, cost effective windows that meet the strict Passive House requirements. SeriousWindows fiberglass windows exceed competitive offerings by:
• Meeting stringent Passive House air infiltration requirements
• Delivering full-frame R-values from R 4.5 to R 11.1
• Advanced warm-edge spacer system
• Revolutionary suspended coated film glass packages

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