The North House as Responsive Architecture: Designing for Interaction between Building, Inhabitant, and Environment

The North House is a proof-of-concept prefabricated solar-powered home designed for northern climates, and intended for the research and promotion of high-performance sustainable architecture. Led by faculty at the University of Waterloo, the project was undertaken by Team North a broad collaborati...

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Main Author: Barhydt, Lauren
Language:en
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10012/5231
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-OWTU.10012-52312013-10-04T04:09:40ZBarhydt, Lauren2010-05-21T16:04:54Z2010-05-21T16:04:54Z2010-05-21T16:04:54Z2010http://hdl.handle.net/10012/5231The North House is a proof-of-concept prefabricated solar-powered home designed for northern climates, and intended for the research and promotion of high-performance sustainable architecture. Led by faculty at the University of Waterloo, the project was undertaken by Team North a broad collaboration between faculty and students at the Universities of Waterloo, Ryerson and Simon Fraser. In October 2009, the North House prototype competed in the U.S. Department of Energy’s Solar Decathlon, where it placed fourth overall. The North House addresses the urgent environmental imperative to dramatically reduce energy consumed by the built environment. It does so, in part by employing two primary technological systems which make use of feedback and response mechanisms; the Distributed Responsive System of Skins (DReSS) reconfigures the envelope in response to changing weather conditions, while the Adaptive Living Interface System (ALIS) provides detailed performance feedback to the inhabitant, equipping them with informed control of their home. This thesis recognizes energy consumption as a socio-technical problem that implicates building inhabitants as much as buildings themselves. It also recognizes the particular potency of the ‘house’ as a building type that touches a broad population in a profoundly personal way; and is thus an apt testing ground for technologies that conserve energy, and those that teach occupants to do the same. With these ideas in mind, the thesis looks to Interactive Architecture - a practice that considers buildings and their inhabitants as an integrated system - as a promising conceptual framework for synthesizing the social and technical aspects of energy conservation in the home.enSolar DecathlonSolar PowerPassive Solar BuildingInteraction DesignThe North House as Responsive Architecture: Designing for Interaction between Building, Inhabitant, and EnvironmentThesis or DissertationSchool of ArchitectureMaster of ArchitectureArchitecture
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Solar Decathlon
Solar Power
Passive Solar Building
Interaction Design
Architecture
spellingShingle Solar Decathlon
Solar Power
Passive Solar Building
Interaction Design
Architecture
Barhydt, Lauren
The North House as Responsive Architecture: Designing for Interaction between Building, Inhabitant, and Environment
description The North House is a proof-of-concept prefabricated solar-powered home designed for northern climates, and intended for the research and promotion of high-performance sustainable architecture. Led by faculty at the University of Waterloo, the project was undertaken by Team North a broad collaboration between faculty and students at the Universities of Waterloo, Ryerson and Simon Fraser. In October 2009, the North House prototype competed in the U.S. Department of Energy’s Solar Decathlon, where it placed fourth overall. The North House addresses the urgent environmental imperative to dramatically reduce energy consumed by the built environment. It does so, in part by employing two primary technological systems which make use of feedback and response mechanisms; the Distributed Responsive System of Skins (DReSS) reconfigures the envelope in response to changing weather conditions, while the Adaptive Living Interface System (ALIS) provides detailed performance feedback to the inhabitant, equipping them with informed control of their home. This thesis recognizes energy consumption as a socio-technical problem that implicates building inhabitants as much as buildings themselves. It also recognizes the particular potency of the ‘house’ as a building type that touches a broad population in a profoundly personal way; and is thus an apt testing ground for technologies that conserve energy, and those that teach occupants to do the same. With these ideas in mind, the thesis looks to Interactive Architecture - a practice that considers buildings and their inhabitants as an integrated system - as a promising conceptual framework for synthesizing the social and technical aspects of energy conservation in the home.
author Barhydt, Lauren
author_facet Barhydt, Lauren
author_sort Barhydt, Lauren
title The North House as Responsive Architecture: Designing for Interaction between Building, Inhabitant, and Environment
title_short The North House as Responsive Architecture: Designing for Interaction between Building, Inhabitant, and Environment
title_full The North House as Responsive Architecture: Designing for Interaction between Building, Inhabitant, and Environment
title_fullStr The North House as Responsive Architecture: Designing for Interaction between Building, Inhabitant, and Environment
title_full_unstemmed The North House as Responsive Architecture: Designing for Interaction between Building, Inhabitant, and Environment
title_sort north house as responsive architecture: designing for interaction between building, inhabitant, and environment
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/10012/5231
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