Sunday, November 25, 2007

Box House- pyatt studio


This is a 1948 vintage 900 square foot house in Boulder, Colorado, reclad in a plywood rainscreen, with an addition made from a custom prefabricated compressed straw panel wall system that was assembled in four hours, that houses a new kitchen, bedroom and bath.

corrugated galvalume, marine plywood and cor-ten steel were chosen for there durability, natural appearance and weathering characteristics.


PyattStudio

2834 11th Street

Boulder, Co 80304



T: 303 803 6810

F: 303 442 3722



info@pyattstudio.com

Monday, November 19, 2007

Solar power??

Tuesday, November 13, 2007

ECO Drywall

Serious claims its drywall, EcoRock®, takes 90 percent less energy to produce than standard drywall, resulting in 98 percent less greenhouse gas emissions. Expected to hit the market in '08.

Buildings consume 40% of all BTUs in the United States. We also plan to introduce ThermaProof high-insulating windows in 2008, designed to substantially reduce the energy lost through windows, the building's carbon footprint, and it's lifetime cost of ownership. And future members of the EcoRock family will weigh less than standard drywall, saving on transportation costs and energy use; and have a higher thermal insulation R-value, meaning buildings consume less energy for operations, also reducing their lifetime footprint and cost of ownership.

See video


Quiet Solution Products
Our first products, originally marketed under the Quiet Solution name, fulfill society’s demand for places and things that are quiet. Noise is pollution, causing physical and psychological stress. QuietRock® soundproof drywall, QuietWood® and related products are used in residential and commercial construction and provide easy, reliable and cost-effective noise reduction. These products allow builders to offer desirable, low-noise living in noisy, previously undesirable areas like urban centers
and along highways – directly supporting sustainable zoning approaches to land use by reducing transportation needs, thereby saving energy and reducing emissions. Quiet® products address serious issues like how to improve life for billions of people around the globe in urban in-fill projects and busy city-center high-rises; improve education through less noise; improve family life through more sleep and less noise-based stress; and support investment decisions by builders on where to develop projects. QuietHome® branded communities drive the value proposition that quiet is an achievable standard, to both homebuyers and to builders.

Monday, November 5, 2007

Shade House,Houston- Matt and Tina Ford

Dwell Magazine-
Notes:
not crazy about the facade.... although i like that he's using reclaimed wood with concrete.
landsape design is lacking... very bare, considering Houston is pretty lush with vegitation... doesn't seem very native to me...

Green technology for heating and cooling is worth investigating.


The exterior features a combination of raw concrete and exposed wood
(reclaimed lumber) that complements the existing concrete structures of
the neighborhood. Beneath the exterior cladding and the roof is a
clever energy-saving solution: radiant barrier house wrap. The wrap,
which looks just like tin foil, repels radiant heat and bounces it
right back into the atmosphere—a breath of fresh air in Houston’s
torrid summers.

He moved the air-conditioning ducts from the attic into the house’s
interior and attached them to an energy-efficient furnace, keeping
costs lower and making the necessary evil of air-conditioning less of a
polluter. In addition to a clever roof temperature control system, the
houses are capped off with Cool Tone shingles, which reflect more light
(and heat) than their traditional counter-parts. The five units measure
between 1,600 and 2,200 square feet—diminutive by Lone Star State
standards—but as Matt puts it, “The greenest thing you can do is a
tight design.”

If the wood floors look vaguely like the basketball court at your high
school, with different colors interspersed within the grains of maple,
it’s because they’re all recycled gym floors from nearby schools. The
countertops and stairs are also wood, these purchased from a man who
runs a tree-trading program: Matt gives him old trees that are cut down
when he clears lots, then buys them back as lumber for construction.


The centerpiece of his solution is a technology he calls
Sun-Flow. Based on the idea that “the majority of cooling that houses
do is to fight heat coming in through the attic,” he explains, he
increased the size of the cavities in the roof rafters to move more air
through them. Each cavity has access to a large vent, and as
temperatures rise, the hot air vents out through a series of airshafts
and channels. As a final step when it really gets hot, rooftop solar
panels power up fans that attach to the sides of the houses, and blow
air out of the attic whenever the sun makes an appearance.

The
result is that hot air never makes its unwelcome way into the house, so
there’s significantly less need to crank up the air conditioner.

Labels: , , , ,

Friday, November 2, 2007

Solar Decathalon 2008

Some pics...


Note:
+ Doors
+ Green walls
+ screens
+ bamboo ibeams
+watergardens/reflecting pools
+ kitchen storage/layouts
MORE PICS