Archive | Sustainable Design

Helios House, Los Angeles, California by Office dA

Helios House, Los Angeles, California by Office dA


Architype Review

“The design of Helios House embraces the paradox of creating a green gas station. Located in Los Angeles at the intersection of two major north/south and east/west corridors – Robertson and Olympic Boulevard – Helios House is situated on a site with a preexisting gas station built in the mid-1970’s.

An important goal of the project was to upgrade the original station in an environmentally conscious manner by “upcycling” old materials and installing new materials that are sustainable and recyclable. Conceived as a “learning lab,” Helios House is also designed to stimulate dialogue and education on the topic of environmental stewardship.

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Popularity: 17% [?]

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Leading-Edge Green Complex For Singapore

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Leading-Edge Green Complex For Singapore


METAEFFICIENT

“Architecture firm Foster + Partners won an international competition to design a green complex that will fill an entire city block in downtown Singapore. This complex will be on the leading edge of green design. It will incorporate arrays of solar cells on the buildings’ facades.

Ribbon-like canopies (also covered with thin-film solar cells) will start at the base of the complex, and rise up the exposed east and west elevations of the towers, where they form a series of vertical louvers.

These will filter the sun and will transform the towers into a series of vertically linked green spaces. The buildings’ slanted facades are oriented to catch the prevailing winds and direct air flow down to cool the ground level spaces.

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Popularity: 19% [?]

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Mock the Apocalypse From a Stylish New Houseboat

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Mock the Apocalypse From a Stylish New Houseboat


Wired

“Worried about melting ice caps and encroaching oceans? Take a nod from Noah and ride out the deluge in a floating home. In the Netherlands, where a quarter of the land is below sea level, the Dutch know that keeping your carpets above high tide requires three basic things: a buoyant foundation, flexible utility pipes, and a leash to tether the house to its property line. Beyond that, houseboats can be just as ambitious as any earthbound structure. Here’s a look at our favorite modern-day arks.

Piet Boon House (above)
Noorderplassen, Netherlands
Designer: Piet Boon/De Peyler

This three-story home uses a heat pump to pull warmth from icy canals. How’s that? Glycol-filled coils below the foundation tap the relative warmth of flowing water - even at 32 degrees, it’s often warmer than the winter air. The glycol then undergoes heat-intensifying compression before warming the bungalow’s underfloor radiant heating system.
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Watervilla De Hoef
De Ronde Venen, Netherlands
Designer: Waterstudio

Adopting the life aquatic doesn’t have to mean sacrifice - take suburbia along for the ride. Watervilla De Hoef floats on a prefab foam-and-concrete base that can also be configured to support a lawn, garage, or street. To fit the abode into an existing neighborhood, Waterstudio slid it into a notch cut out of the canal bank, giving this home on the water all the comforts of loam.
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Gray Residence

Tomahawk Island, Portland, Oregon
Designer: Urbansun

If you’re going to reduce your footprint on land, you might as well reduce your carbon footprint, too. An 80-gallon solar-heated water tank warms this house’s forced-air system, while another tank collects rainwater that’s used to irrigate the roof garden. Weather permitting, photovoltaic panels cover about 65 percent of the dwelling’s daily energy needs.”
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Popularity: 28% [?]

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zeroHouse by Specht Harpman

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zeroHouse by Specht Harpman


Architectural Record

” The zeroHouse by Specht Harpman, a New York City-based firm, is deliberately placeless. It could be erected in Vermont or in Texas, where its unbuilt design won the 2007 Studio Award from the Texas Society for Architects. A slew of high-efficiency techniques afford the house its full energy independence: solar panels store and produce power, allowing a fully charged zeroHouse to operate continuously for up to one week with no sunlight; a rainwater collection plane gathers and diverts water into an elevated 2200-gallon cistern; gravity-fed plumbing fixtures eliminate the need for power-consuming pumps; a compost unit beneath the house processes organic waste and converts it into clean, dry fertilizer that needs to be removed only twice a year; and a high-efficiency heating and air-conditioning system is separately zoned for sleeping and living areas.

The structure of the house contributes to its low environmental impact. Made from prefabricated components, the walls, roof, and floor are all insulated with closed-cell structural foam and achieve a thermal resistance rating of R-58. The full-wall windows in each room are triple-insulated and fabricated from low-e heat-mirror glass. Exterior doors feature vacuum-sealed aero-gel panels to maintain maximum thermal performance. Last but not least, zeroHouse employs a helical-anchor foundation system that touches the ground at only four points and requires no excavation, meaning minimal disturbance to the earth.

While it’s Specht Harpman’s smart design that keeps the house running on nothing, all functions of the house are monitored by an array of sensors and regulated by a “house brain” that can be controlled through any laptop computer. Fully customizable for personal usage patterns, zeroHouse can be used as a weekend getaway or for an extended stay.”







Images are courtesy of Specht Harpman

Formal name of project: zeroHouse

Location: The zeroHouse is being marketed worldwide. It has been designed to work within an operational range of 36 N to 36 S latitude for year-round occupancy, and 47 N to 47 S for partial-year occupancy.

Gross square footage: 650 sq. ft.
Completion Date (Month and Year): Unbuilt
Total construction cost: $350,000

Architect: Specht Harpman - http://www.spechtharpman.com/
338 West 39th Street, New York,
New York 10018

Popularity: 16% [?]

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McDonough reveals “Tree Tower” concept


- Via building

” US green architect to unveil new speculative 40-storey skyscraper at World Future Energy Summit in Abu Dhabi later this month Green architect and writer, William McDonough, has come good on his promise to Fortune Magazine to design a speculative tower for the future. The skyscraper will have a “100% positive impact on people and places”.


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” … Buildings consume 40 percent of our energy and can have life spans longer than humans. Because we live, work and associate with others in buildings, they form part of the fabric of human life—and thus have an enormous effect not only on the quality of individual lives but also on the state of the earth. … we have configured a structure that is not just kind to nature; it actually imitates nature. Imagine a building that makes oxygen, distills water, produces energy, changes with the seasons—and is beautiful. In effect, that building is like a tree, standing in a city that is like a forest. – By William McDonough, founder and principal of William McDonough & Partners (Fortune)

Shaped like a cross between the Gherkin and a cone shell, the 40-plus story tower by William McDonough + Partners, encompasses trees and other greenery and, so the architect claims, will behave like a tree. “It’s a building that receives its energy from the sun, that grows food, that builds soil, that provides a habitat for hundreds of species, that changes colours with the seasons, that creates micro-climates, that would purify water,” He said. “A building that would do just about everything a tree can do except self-replicate.”

Form and function
Curved forms increase structural stability and maximize enclosed space; this reduces the amount of materials needed for construction. The shape is also aerodynamic, diffusing the impact of wind.”

The building encloses a series of “atrium gardens” on the western side with plants intended to clean the air inside the building. The northern side is covered with clear glass in front of mosses which should absorb particulates in the air. The building recycles waste water for use in the building’s gardens which, when cleansed by the plants, will be fed back into the grey water system once more.

The south side of the building is made up of 34,000 sq m of solar panels, meeting 40% of the building’s energy needs. A combined natural gas-fuelled heat-and-power plant, operating at 90% efficiency supplies the missing 60%.To cut down further on energy, workstations are fitted with presence sensors shutting down when people aren’t there and adjusting heat, light and sound when they are. “We don’t heat or cool ghosts,” says McDonough, mysteriously.He and Cradle to Cradle co-author, Michael Braungart, will talk about the tower among other ideas at the World Future Energy Summit which takes place in Abu Dhabi on the 21-23 of January. Lord Foster is due to give the closing speech at the event. McDonough is credited with creating the first solar powered house in Ireland and received the first and only Presidential Award for Sustainable Development for an individual in 1996.

A spokesperson for the practice confirmed there had been no concrete commissions for the building so far.
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Popularity: 22% [?]

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ANTI-SMOG, Paris


- Via Vincent Callebault Architecte

” Anti-Smog is a parasite project set up on the post-industrial urban structure of the Petite Ceinture and the canal de l’Ourcq in the 19th Parisian district. It is a public equipment dedicated to promote the last innovations on the theme of sustainable development in urban area in terms of housing or transport. Its role is to apply all the avant-garde renewable energies so as to fight against the Parisian smog. This smog (smoke + fog) is a bluish to reddish haze. It is the result of the water condensing (the fog) on the suspended dust and the presence of ozone in the troposphere. The smoke is produced in major part by the burning of fossil fuel and is composed of sulphurous gas (such as sulphur dioxide) in addition to the dust on which the water steam contained in the fog condensates itself. This photochemical cloud is associated to many detrimental effects for the health (asthma, infarct, AVC) and for the environment (acid rains, attrition of the building). This project aims therefore at inventing a new architecture able to disasphyxiate the area in which it is set up!
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Popularity: 6% [?]

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Wind dam by Chetwood Associates


- Via Dezeen

Building Design shows a power-generating “wind dam” designed by architects Chetwoods that uses a giant spinnaker sail slung between mountains to funnel wind into a turbine.
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Popularity: 5% [?]

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Project7ten, The Real Green Deal


- Via Jetson Green

” We’re no longer in rendering stage, this is the real deal. Project7ten is built and ready for viewing. Actually, it’s ready for sale if: (1) it hasn’t already been sold, and (2) you’re in the market for one of the greenest, most modern homes in California. Interestingly, this house is the first conventionally- constructed LEED Platinum home in the state.

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Popularity: 5% [?]

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Agro-Housing Becoming an Option for China


- Via Jetson Green

” In China, there’s a massive exodus from the rural to urban areas, but it’s controlled because the country doesn’t have enough housing for everyone that wants to live in a city. At the same time, urbanization accentuates the air and soil pollution problems. So, Knafo Klimor Architects proposed an agro-housing project that blends agriculture and high-rise housing in one structure. This agro-housing project brings the food-supply directly to the building, and to the extent that residents can realize the benefits of urban farming, there is a decreased reliance on transportation for agricultural products (shopping and delivery to stores). Plus, with the building’s integrated water capture systems, the project has the potential to reduce water consumption and runoff. Residents could make money off the crops, too. ….
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Popularity: 4% [?]

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Top 5 Cities For Public Transit


- Via Inhabitat

” …. Good public transportation can mean a number of things, but it is generally defined as being easy to use, efficient, clean, and get you where you want to go with as little fuss as possible. A tall order indeed. Here are our top five cities…
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Popularity: 3% [?]

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