Not exact matches
That's because it is built to the Passive
House /
Passivhaus standard, which combines superinsulation, compact form, no thermal bridges and serious air tightness.
Passive
House, or
Passivhaus, is probably the toughest energy efficiency
standard anywhere;
houses that meet the
standard have super insulation, minimal thermal bridging, high quality windows and controlled ventilation.
If the Passive
House (or
Passivhaus)
standard was the building code
standard, our
houses would use a lot less energy and would be a lot more reslient.
And this is with buildings designed to meet the
passivhaus standard benchmarks and modelled in the passive
house planning package, not just designed to some notional «
passivhaus principles».
While high performance building owes a great debt of gratitude to European pioneers like Dr. Wolfgang Feist of the
Passivhaus Institut in Germany,
standards like Passive
House need to be aligned with the US market, US rating schemes, and US incentive programs to really take off here.
In 1996, Dr. Feist founded the
Passivhaus Institut in Darmstadt, Germany, to develop and promote the Passive
House Standard using the tool developed to enable these buildings to be consitantly replicated: the Passive
House Planning Package (PHPP.)
While embracing traditional farmstead design made it trickier for this new build home in the Scottish Highlands to meet the coveted passive
house standard, mixing modern
standards of super-insulation with vernacular farmhouse architecture ultimately led to the creation of a very special home for proprietors Jeanette and Jon Fenwick — one that picked up a coveted UK
Passivhaus Award in 2016.
It is true that the
Passivhaus Standard was originally developed for
houses.
And as other types of buildings have been delivered to the
Passivhaus Standard, the Passive
House Planning Package used in the design and certification process has evolved and developed also.
It is often assumed that the
Passivhaus Standard only applies to
houses or
housing.
The
housing authority expects the
Passivhaus homes to be affordable (by Whistler
standards).
Please join us for this very special event with Dr. Wolfgang Feist, co-developer of the Passive
House Standard and founder of the
Passivhaus Institut in Darmstadt, Germany, as he tours Northern California en route to the 5th Annual Passive
House Conference in Portland.
Thanks to a movement that originated in Pennsylvania, many states are now offering tax credits and incentives to encourage the construction of buildings that are in compliance with the Passive
House performance
standard developed by the German - based
Passivhaus Institut and adapted to the United States market by the Passive
House Institute US.
It not only has been saved and modernized, but it actually has been renovated to
Passivhaus standards, no easy feat, by Doug Mcdonald of Mudagreen.com, with Ken Levenson and Gregory Duncan as Passive
House consultant.
The
Passivhaus (now called Passive
House in North America)
standard is usually thought of as a response to temperate or cold conditions, given its German origin.
UPDATE Readers in the know about
Passivhaus advise that I should point out that there is the EnerPHit
standard for renovations and the PHI Low Energy Building Standard «suitable for buildings which do not fully comply with Passive House criteria for various reasons
standard for renovations and the PHI Low Energy Building
Standard «suitable for buildings which do not fully comply with Passive House criteria for various reasons
Standard «suitable for buildings which do not fully comply with Passive
House criteria for various reasons.»
The best home fell well short of the
Passivhaus standard, of course; it measured 2.24 ac / h @ 50 Pa — about the same as the superinsulated
house that Riversong built.
(I did myself when I cherrypicked from 11 great reasons why Passive
House is such a great green building
standard However it might just be a great way to sell the
Passivhaus to a larger audience.
British architect Elrond Burrell notes in his post,
Passivhaus; Comfort, Comfort, Comfort, Energy Efficiency that the
standard for airtightness (0.6 air changes per hour) makes the
house completely draft - free.
The
Passivhaus, or Passive
House standard is tough to meet, but comes down to a couple of basic principles: A lot of insulation, careful detailing and really good windows.
We love Passive
House or
Passivhaus, the incredibly efficient building
standard that sets an absolute limit on how much energy one can use per square foot or how much air is allowed to leak.
The Passive
House Planning Package (PHPP): a detailed programme of interlinked worksheets that provide everything needed to design a building to the international
Passivhaus Standard.