towards ‘net zero’ construction for all buildings

“Our vision is to create possibilities to make net zero construction in an efficient way, giving everyone the possibility to do so.”

So articulates Jonathan Karlsson, Founder and CEO (with degrees in theoretical and construction physics) of Innenco, an international company based in Malmö, Sweden that performs.

Reports Inhabitat,

“It starts with their active systems: pipes are integrated into the frame construction to utilize a building’s thermal mass. Adding heat pumps and chillers to the system allows Innenco to get four to six times greater efficiency in heating and cooling. At this point they’re able to reduce energy by 85%, so to cover the last 15% they install Innenco Quantum Solar panels. ‘This makes an investment in solar cells much lower than a traditional system, and we can get net zero for a really cost-efficient investment.'”

See:

This new energy concept from Sweden can make any building net zero” | Lacy Cooke, Inhabitat, 11 October 2017

Innenco

#Innenco #Malmö #Sweden #JonathanKarlsson #architecture #design #energy #netzero #CO2 #H2O #buildingtech #tech #physics #builtenvironment #resilience #thermalmass #efficiency #energyefficiency #costefficiency #performance #luxury #smartluxury #urbanluxury #urbanliving #realestate #finance #ROI #construction #Inhabitat

iconic glass buildings ・energy neutral & aesthetically beautiful

Looking beyond roof surface to make modern commercial and residential buildings energy neutral, Physee, a tech startup headquartered in the Netherlands, has developed and installed the world’s first commercial, fully transparent solar-power-generating windows.

Ferdinand Grapperhaus, co-founder and CEO of the startup and a graduate of Delft Technical University, says “Right now, we are looking for iconic projects all over the world to show that a large glass building can be made energy neutral in an aesthetic way.”

“Large commercial estates consume a lot of energy. If you want to make these buildings energy neutral, you never have enough roof surface. Therefore, activating the buildings’ facades will significantly contribute to making the buildings energy neutral.”

Physee’s PowerWindows have solar cells installed in the edges at a specific angle. The angle allows the incoming solar light to be efficiently transformed into electricity.

The company is already working on second-generation technology that will triple the efficiency of the PowerWindows. The new technology is based on the ability of thulium to transform a broad spectrum of light into near-infrared light. Grapperhaus and his classmate Willem Kesteloo discovered this ability of thulium to transform a broad spectrum of light into near-infrared light in 2014 while studying at TU Delft.

The surface of the second generation of PowerWindows will be coated with a special, thuliam-enhanced material. This material will transforms oncoming visible light into near-infrared light. The near-infrared light will then be transported towards the solar cells at the edges of the windows.

The headquarters of Rabobank, the Netherlands’ largest bank, commissioned the first installation of Physee’s PowerWindows. The installation was unveiled in June in Eindhoven, in the south of the Netherlands.

Observes Physee’s Ferdinand Grapperhaus, “Large commercial estates consume a lot of energy. If you want to make these buildings energy neutral, you never have enough roof surface. Therefore, activating the buildings’ facades will significantly contribute to making the buildings energy neutral.”

The innovative solar technology has won Physee a place on the World Economic Forum‘s Technology Pioneers 2017 list.

The WEF’s 2017 list of Technology Pioneers,  announced on June 14, includes companies developing technologies including artificial intelligence, cyber security solutions and biotechnology. The pioneering companies are selected for their potential to change the world.

Physee’s presence on the list, observes Grapperhaus, shows that the world is starting to take climate change seriously:

“Ten years ago, sustainability was something that wasn’t taken very seriously — not by venture capitalists, not by many governments and neither by large corporations. What I have seen over the last three years is that corporations are becoming more and more responsible, governments are becoming more and more supportive, and venture capitalists are becoming more and more interested.”

See:

Transparent solar power creating windows debut” | BlouinNews, 29 July 2017

More Than a View: Windows Double as Solar Panels” | Tereza Pultarova, LiveScience, 3 July 2017

Introducing the Technology Pioneers 2017” | World Economic Forum

Physee | Forbes 30 Under 30 Europe

Fully tranparent solar charged PowerWindow” | Materia, 19 September 2016

#Physee #FerdinandGrapperhaus #PowerWindow #solar #solarenergy #architecture #design #climaterisk #Rabobank #finance #TUDelft #sustainability #venturecapital #WEF #WorldEconomicForum #TechnologyPioneers2017 #tech #buildingtech #startup #techstartup #CO2

PassivDom houses are very, very smart & very beautiful

PassivDom, a start-up based in Ukraine and California, is a tech-based manufacturing company.

PassivDom 3D prints self-learning modular houses, some of which are fully autonomous. “Autonomous” means “off the utility grid.” Solar energy is produced and can be stored in a battery connected to the house. Water is collected and filtered from humidity in the air. The house may feature an independent sewage system.

The manufacturing process works like this: The team develops a “map” for the 3D printers / seven-axel robots in its factories in Ukraine and California. The 3D printer / seven-axel robot prints the roof, floor, and walls layer by layer. The material used is composed of carbon fibers, polyurethane, resins, basalt fibers, and fiberglass. This material is six times stronger than steel.

Doors, windows, appliances, an alarm system, solar panels, and the septic, electrical, healing, cooling systems are then added – by people.

According to the PassivDom website, PassivDom has the highest thermal performance among residential buildings. PassivDom windows are the warmest in the world. PassivDom exceeds the energy efficiency requirements of both the Passive House Institute and LEED.

PassivDom provides a 40-year materials warranty for the preservation of thermal characteristics. There are no materials that will lose thermal conductivity.

A PassivDom house is not only a smart house, it is a “very, very smart house.” All devices are networked to the Internet of Things and can be controlled from a smart phone. The micro-climate system is self-learning, monitors oxygen and carbon dioxide, and maintains the temperature and humidity desired by the occupant.

And PassivDom houses are beautiful.

Wow.

See:

PassivDom

A robot can print this $32,000 house in as little as 8 hours — take a look inside” | Leanna Garfield, Business Insider, 6 April 2017

#smart #smarthouse #PassivDom #Ukraine #California #tech #buildingtech #realestate #art #smartluxury #resilience #luxury #3Dprinting #autonomous #offgrid #solarenergy #electricity #water #CO2 #PassivHaus #LEED

Market Solutions for Environmental Challenges

Goldman Sachs today signed a long-term Power Purchase Agreement (PPA) with a subsidiary of NextEra Energy Resources, LLC.

The agreement will enable the investment and development of a new 68 megawatt wind project in Pennsylvania. The wind project is expected to facilitate up to 150 construction jobs and, once operational, result in the reduction of more than 200,000 tons of greenhouse gas emissions every year.

Goldman Sachs reiterates its commitment to market solutions for environmental challenges.

 “We are committed to being a leader in the development of renewable energy. By enabling this new wind project to come online, the agreement will help grow the renewable grid and contribute to the momentum behind a lower carbon economy.”

Lloyd C. Blankfein, chairman and chief executive officer of Goldman Sachs

The PPA with NextEra Energy Resources is a collaborative effort between Goldman Sachs’ commodities trading group (J. Aron) and its Corporate Services and Real Estate department.

Goldman Sachs has achieved its carbon neutrality commitment. The company is working towards achieving its goal of 100 percent power for its global electricity needs by the year 2020.

Goldman Sachs is a member of the RE100 initiative, “the world’s most influential companies, committed to 100% renewable power.”

See:

Goldman Sachs Signs Long-Term Power Purchase Agreement to Spur Renewable Energy Growth and Jobs” | Press Release, 12 June 2017

Our Operational Impact” | Goldman Sachs Environmental Stewardship

RE100

#realestate #resilience #cleanpower #renewableenergy #windenergy #PPA #GoldmanSachs #tech #greenhousegasemissions #climatechange #market #marketsolutions

 

Downtown San Diego | early morning vistas

Early morning vistas.

San Diego is, indeed, beautiful and has what is widely acknowledged as one of the best, if not the best, micro-climate in the United States. Very Mediterranean.

Why “tech”, that I appear to mention so often and that is taking root in the downtown San Diego economic eco-system?

“Tech,” in my mind, is no more than information gathering, processing, analyzing, reporting, and using, with certain questions asked (by people), the questions usually having to do with certain industries (art, finance, transport, design, building and construction, chemistry, physics, aerospace engineering, entertainment, etc.).

Sort of like groups of individual Marines gathering, processing and using information, on steroids.

Why pay attention to tech in downtown San Diego? Some of these companies have just appeared downtown, willy nilly, not according to the city plan. People in the tech industry generally speaking make more money than those working in the hospitality industry (housekeeping, serving tables, etc.). It is money generated here rather than earned elsewhere and brought here by visitors, tourists, and buyers of second or third homes.

 

#SanDiego #downtownSanDiego #realestate #resilience #art #tech #technology #finance #urbanliving #urbanluxury

 

 

 

 

MIT Media Lab’s paradigm shifting Digital Construction Platform

MIT Media Lab Mediated Matter group researchers realize a paradigm shift in architectural design, construction, and thinking with the Digital Construction Platform (DCP): custom, individualized buildings computationally grown and additively manufactured using on-site environmental data.

The Digital Construction Platform is a single, multi-dimensional system into which data gathering, analysis, design, architecture, and construction have been integrated.

The Digital Construction Platform (system) is operated electrically (photovoltaic charging is discussed), is free moving, and can be used to design and digitally construct, from locally available materials, multi-functional structures of any size in a single build.

Internal structure can be modified in new ways. Different materials can be incorporated and material density varied as design and construction proceeds to provide optimal combinations of strength, insulation, or other properties.

Benefits of structures built with this system include speed to market, less cost, and customization to the requirements of the site and the objectives of the maker.

Designed to be self-sufficient, the platform can be adapted to existing building sites, equipment, and building codes without requiring whole new evaluations.

Data about the site is collected using built-in sensors for temperature, light, and other parameters. This data is used in the design process and to make adjustments to the structure as it is built.

The use of on-site environmental data has many benefits. Data from sources such as derived ground-penetrating radar analysis of the site enables the placement of supporting pillars, for instance, in optimal locations.

On-site environmental data can also be used in the design of walls.

  • The walls may have varying thicknesses depending on their orientation. Thicker, more insulated walls can be built on the north side of buildings in cold climates
  • The walls may be configured to respond to local wind conditions. A relatively simple, yet entirely sophisticated, feature  such as a curve in the walls may help the structure withstand wind
  • The walls may be designed and built to respond to load-bearing requirements. Like columns, walls may taper from bottom to top as load-bearing requirements decrease.

The Digital Construction Platform features a scoop and a tracked vehicle that carries a large, industrial, precision-controlled robotic arm with a smaller, precision-motion robotic arm at its end.

Sourcing and use of local materials is discussed. The platform’s scoop could acquire local materials for the construction. The scoop would be used concurrently to prepare the building surface.

The precision-controlled arm can be used to direct both a conventional and non-conventional construction nozzle. The nozzles can be used to pour concrete and spray insulation material, can be adapted to vary the density of the material being poured, and can mix different materials as construction proceeds.

The precision-controlled robotic arm would also be used to direct additional digital fabrication and effectors, such as a milling head.

The platform embodies a shift not only in design and construction paradigms but a paradigm shift also in our thinking about buildings – from a “machine to live in, made of standardized parts” to “the building as an organism, computationally grown, additively manufactured, possibly biologically augmented.”

“‘The construction industry is still mostly doing things the way it has for hundreds of years. The buildings are rectilinear, mostly built from single materials, put together with saws and nails,’ and mostly built from standardized plans.”

Steven Keating PhD ’16, mechanical engineering graduate and former research affiliate in the Mediated Matter group at the MIT Media Lab. He led the development of the system as his doctoral thesis work.

From an architectural perspective the project “challenges traditional building typologies such as walls, floors, or windows, and proposes that a single system could be fabricated using the DCP that can vary its properties continuously to create wall-like elements that continuously fuse into windows.”

Neri Oxman, MIT Media Lab Mediated Matter group director and associate professor of media arts and sciences.

The robotic system is described in the journal Science Robotics (26 April 2017) in a paper entitled “Toward site-specific and self-sufficient robotic fabrication on architectural scales” by Steven Keating PhD ’16, a mechanical engineering graduate and former research affiliate in the Mediated Matter group at the MIT Media Lab; Julian Leland and Levi Cai, both research assistants in the Mediated Matter group; and Neri Oxman, group director and associate professor of media arts and sciences.

See:

System Can 3D Print an Entire Building” | Science Daily, 26 April 2017

MIT Develops a System Than Can 3D Print the Basic Structure of an Entire Building” | SciTechDaily.com, 27 April 2017, Source: David L. Chandler, MIT News

Publication: Steven J. Keating, et al., “Toward site-specific and self-sufficient robotic fabrication on architectural scales,” Science Robotics 26 Apr 2017:Vol. 2, Issue 5, eaam8986; DOI: 10.1126/scirobotics.aam8986

#architecture #design #construction #tech #realestate #resilience #smartluxury #art #MIT #MITMediaLab #3Dprinting

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

Rethinking Downtown San Diego | Luxury, Tech, Demand

Downtown San Diego is seeing significant developments.

Nat Bosa
, recognizing that downtown has some very special attributes (weather, proximity to the sea, proximity to the airport, proximity to great schools and research institutions, entirely walkable, …), is very active in downtown San Diego.

Bosa Development’s KPF-designed Pacific Gate is well underway.

Savina is a next project by Bosa. Savina will be close both to the water and to Little Italy. Price points have not yet been released. More information about Savina will become available next week, on May 4.

The downtown San Diego economy, further, is shifting. A growing number of tech firms are choosing to situate themselves downtown.

  • UCSD is taking permanent space downtown

With members of the tech cohort amongst the highest earners in San Diego, this may well have a significant impact on both the economy and the demand for downtown real estate.

See:

The Man Behind the Bosa Brand” | Bosa Development

Kohn Pedersen Fox, Pacific Gate

Savina

Tech Organizations in Downtown San Diego by Category | Carto

San Diego Regional Economic Development Corporation, Technology

Downtown San Diego, The Innovation Economy’s Next Frontier” | Downtown San Diego Partnership & the UC San Diego Extension Center for Research on the Regional Economy, April 2016

UC San Diego Sees Downtown as Innovation’s Next Frontier” | UC San Diego Extension Blog, February 2017

San Diego’s Technology Cluster | San Diego Regional Economic Development Corporation

#realestate #tech #luxury #smartluxury #SanDiego #downtownSanDiego #education #KohnPedersenFox #KPF

urban & street art | challenging paradigms

Christian Utz is co-founder of 52Masterworks, a crowd investment art collection platform that serves art collectors and investors.

In 2016, Mr. Utz opened the Museum of Urban and Contemporary Art (MUCA) In Munich.

Speaking with Larry’s List, Christian Utz describes urban and street art, their challenge to paradigms of high and low art, the limited access to (supply of) this form of art, and how urban and street art are largely neglected by current art discourse.

Urban Art reaches beyond any niches. Urban artists often use harsh imagery associated with neglected topics. But, whilst the message is provoking, it is equally approachable and sometimes even compassionate. In the world of urban art, everyone is welcomed to join the artistic conversation – that makes this art form so special.

Street Art challenges the paradigms between high and low art. The consequences of the institutionalization of this art form are the limitation of access to artworks, and especially, the volatility of market prices. I guess it has become much harder for new starters to collect than ten years ago.

Street art as an art form of the 21st century is rightly considered as a globally celebrated phenomenon. Nevertheless, street and urban art is barely part of the present art discourse.

See:

The Collector Who Founded Germany’s First Urban Art Museum | Larry’s List, 22 March 2017

52Masterworks

Larry’s List

Museum of Urban and Contemporary Art (MUCA)

#art #artcollections #streetart #urbanart #collectingart #collectionsmanagement #smartart #urbanluxury #smartluxury #resilience #investing #finance #tech

smart luxury | PassivDom, the first totally autonomous house

Word is out of PassivDom, a passive and elegantly luxurious house designed and built in the Ukraine by Max Gerbut, a PhD of Engineering Sciences (physics of the solid state) and his start-up PassivDom.

PassivDom is the first totally autonomous house in the world that doesn’t need any fuel combustion even in Arctic climate conditions.

“The module uses only ecologically clean solar energy for all inhabitants’ needs: climate control (heating and cooling), water generation, air quality and oxygen control. The house itself produces electricity for all household appliances.

PassivDom is “designed to self-sustain in all climatic conditions with their own, off-the-grid power sources and self-learning systems networked to the internet of things.

John Biggs, the East Coast Editor of TechCrunch.com calls it “pretty darn rad.”

Biggs reports,

““PassivDom is the world’s first mobile and transportable house with Passive House parameters,” said Gerbut. “Due to the use of advanced materials and unique developments by our engineers, PassivDom has the highest thermal performance among residential buildings. The walls of PassivDom are as warm as brick. Thermal characteristics are high enough to use 20 times less energy than an ordinary building. That’s why it is possible to realize full off-grid autonomy in a cold climate without complex and expensive engineering heating system.”

“The first model, the modulOne, includes solar panels that power the climate control system, a clean water system that takes moisture from the air and an air quality control system that includes carbon dioxide control. The frame is made of 3D-printed carbon fiber and fiberglass, and the entire house is recyclable.

See:

PassivDom” (a US telephone number is included)

PassivDom is a Zombie-proof ‘autonomous 3D-printed mobile house’” | John Biggs, TechCrunch.com, 10 March 2017

Ukraine startup 3D prints fully autonomous home” | Blouin News, 17 March 2017

#luxury #urbanluxury #smartluxury #realestate #art #resilience #tech #design #materialsscience #climatechange