Archive for August, 2008

ICELAND BOUND: In Search of Natural Beauty

Thursday, August 28th, 2008

GREENFAB WILL BE TAKING A SHORT BREAK as I travel to Iceland for a two week photography trip with my dad.  This trip has been a dream of mine so when I RETURN THE WEEK OF SEPTEMBER 15th I will be anxious to share with you all that I have learned from the land that produces 70% of the nation’s primary energy from renewable sources.

Iceland is an island of thundering waterfalls, barren highlands, smoldering volcanoes, gushing geysers, bubbling mudpots, soothing thermal pools, the largest icecap outside the poles and not to mention the coolest turf houses in the world.

Here are a few articles that help explain the major role Iceland will play in our global future as we try to understand and use energy responsibly and efficiently.

>> MINISTRY OF INDUSTRY ENERGY AND TOURISM SPEECH

>> ICELAND’S ENERGY ANSWER COMES NATURALLY

>> ICELAND’S HYDROGEN SHIP HERALDS FOSSIL-FREE FUTURE

 

Click here to see BEAUTIFUL IMAGES from all of Icelands landscapes

WE’LL BE BACK IN TWO WEEKS!

The image above is a manipulation of a Daniel Bergmann original photograph

 

Harsh Words For MoMA’s “Home Delivery”

Friday, August 22nd, 2008

By: Johnny Hartsfield

GreenFab had previously shown the progress leading up to the opening of MoMA’s “Home Delivery: Fabricating the Modern Dwelling” but we have yet to share some of the opinions of those that seem to be less impressed with MoMA’s efforts to explain the history behind prefabricated dwellings and the five international architects’ take on “the future”. 

The Washington Post recently published an article titled “Walls That Talk, and Repeat Themselves” that raises some interesting points about the story MoMA is telling about prefabricated design and construction.  Here are a few highlights:

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RuralZED: A Zero Carbon Kit House By ZEDfactory

Wednesday, August 20th, 2008

By: Johnny Hartsfield

The team that brought us BedZED back in 2002 has released yet another zero carbon housing product called ruralZED earlier this year at EcoBuild in Earls Court, London.  The ZEDfactory installed their new affordable, zero carbon home in only 3 days.  ruralZED is a high quality housing system combining micro-generation and small biomass technologies that help achieve a Level 6 in England’s Code for Sustainable Homes.  What makes this product unique is that the ZEDfactory has built into their system the ability to upgrade from a Code 3 to a Code 6 for 70% of all UK building sites. 

ruralZED is made of a hybrid laminated timber frame flexible enough for a variety of master plan options at fixed prefabricated kit prices with volume discounts.  Minimizing its demand on resources, ruralZED catches sunlight, wind, fresh air and rain using tried and tested energy systems.

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The Commons: When LEEDing Is Not Enough

Tuesday, August 12th, 2008

By: Johnny Hartsfield

Garrett and Dustin Moon of Portland, Oregon (although they are really from my home state of Washington) are building what promises to be one of the first Living Buildings in the country.  GreenFab highlighted their project, The Commons, back in April to share with you what very few people are attempting to do in this country when LEED is not enough. 

The Commons is “designed to reach beyond today’s highest green building standards and become the first U.S. home to meet the Living Building Challenge.  The Commons will generate all its own energy without fossil fuels, reclaim all its water, be free of unhealthy materials and be a place of beauty and community.”

Hot off the press, Garrett has just published a paper, Sustainable Architecture: an overview of equitable and efficient spaces that helps to identify and explain sustainable design processes and applications.  The document is half a survey of sustainability and its applications and half a case study of their project, The Commons.  This is a MUST READ!

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Sean Godsell’s Green Glenburn House

Friday, August 8th, 2008

By: Johnny Hartsfield

Although it was completed a year ago, Sean Godsell’s Glenburn House is still worth revisiting.  Nestled within the rolling hillsides approximately 1.5 hours drive north east of Melbourne, Australia, the Glenburn House is a beacon of sustainable design.  The building skin includes solar collectors for generating electricity and hot water.  Other passive features include double glazing, rainwater harvesting and digital power management.

The house is a long, linear gesture carved into an undulating landscape.  This linear plan is enhanced by the architects’ barcode motif.  Within the home, a series of organized spaces results in a coded arrangement that is unique to the client.  Somewhat of a “tectonic thumbprint” for living.  

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Dockside Green: 63 Point LEED Platinum

Tuesday, August 5th, 2008

By: Johnny Hartsfield

Dockside Green is a 15-acre master-planned waterfront community in Victoria B.C. consisting of three neighborhoods designed to create a sense of belonging and true environmental sustainability.  Targeted for LEED Platinum, Dockside Green’s principles of New Urbanism, smart growth, green building and sustainable community design are the driving forces behind this development project. 

Synergy, designed by Busby Perkins+Will, is the first phase of the overall Dockside Green development to be completed and includes 95 homes in two condo buildings, townhomes and commercial space.  Recently, Synergy achieved 63 points out of a possible 70 for a LEED Platinum certification.  To reach this highest LEED rating to-date, Synergy incorporated a number of innovative sustainable systems.  Read on to learn more.

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London’s Prefabricated Carmarthen Place

Monday, August 4th, 2008

By: Johnny Hartsfield

Located on a brown-field site on Bermondsey Street in London, Carmarthen Place SE1 incorporates sustainable building practices, historic vernacular and contextual sympathy into a prefabricated, timber clad urban infill project.  Designed by architect Emma Doherty with AiR, the project consists of two 2-bedroom homes and an artist’s studio. 

An innovative solid wood panel system was chosen for its total cassette system panels complete with insulation, breather membranes, batons, cladding and pre-fitted fenestration and doors.  The large panels were craned, erected and bolted together on-site in just 12 days.  The laminated solid wood panels are 100mm thick and form the breathable structural skeleton of the building as well as the finished interior surface.  Internal staircases were made on-site using English Oak and are bathed in light piercing through double height voids covered in glass.  Deep set windows and boxed protrusions give framed views on the top two floors while high-level windows on the ground floor create a sense of privacy.  Complete with a sedum green roof, Carmarthen Place SE1 is the first project in the UK to be developed using Riko’s sustainable system.

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Dynamic Rotating Prefab Tower in Dubai

Friday, August 1st, 2008

By: Johnny Hartsfield

“Visionary architect Dr. David Fisher is the creator of the revolutionary Dynamic Tower, the world’s first building in motion. The Dynamic Tower heralds a new era of architecture: Buildings in motion will challenge traditional architecture, becoming the symbol of a new philosophy that will change the look of our cities and the concept of living.

The Dynamic Tower offers infinite design possibilities, as each floor rotates independently at different speeds, resulting in a unique and ever evolving shape that introduces a fourth dimension to architecture, Time.

The Dynamic Tower is environmentally friendly, with the ability to generate electricity for itself as well as other buildings nearby making it the first building designed to be self-powered, it achieves this feat with wind turbines fitted between each rotating floor. An 80-story building will have up to 79 wind turbines, making it a true green power plant.

The Dynamic Tower is also the first skyscraper to be built entirely from prefabricated parts that are custom made in a workshop, resulting of fast construction and of substantial cost savings . this approach known as the Fisher Method, also requires far less workers on construction site while each floor of the building can be completed in only seven days, units can also be customized according to the owners needs and styles.”

>> Dynamic Architecture