Archive for April, 2009

Shai Agassi on Attacking Climate Change

April 27th, 2009 by Seldom

In 2007 Shai Agassi left his position as next in line for CEO at SAP to found Better Place.

When horrific climate-change scenarios elicit little but endless chatter from governments and entrenched special interests, the difference between talk and action represent an embarrassing gulf. Meet Shai Agassi, who has stepped fearlessly into that gap. His approach to solving the puzzle of electric automobiles could spark nothing short of an automotive revolution.

-TED.com

A two minute excerpt from Shai’s TED talk.

Watch the entire 18 minute presentation where he describes Better Place’s plan at TED.com

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CAUTION

April 21st, 2009 by snugganut

Thank goodness for this sign, or i could have suffered a serious head-neck separation/ lumbar-snap injury while boarding my plane!

uneven-surfaces

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How Fiberglass Window Frames Are Made

April 19th, 2009 by Seldom

The best windows in Europe are made with thermally broken wood frames, but the best windows in North America have fiberglass frames. The European wood windows have my vote for the best made windows in the world. I consider them art. However, I have to admit that fiberglass is a pretty ideal material for window frames.

As wood takes on water and dries it can warp. If it takes on enough water it can rot. Fiberglass, on the other hand is impervious.

Expansion and contraction are another problem. Aluminum frames expand about 3 times as much as glass when they are heated and vinyl expands 7 times as much as glass. Wood does not expand when heated. It expands with humidity. The varying expansion rates can result in stressed frames, broken seals, and inoperable hardware, but fiberglass frames have nearly the same coefficient of expansion that plate glass does.

Fiberglass frames are made by a process called pultrusion, a combination of the words ‘pull’ and ‘extrusion’. Vinyl and aluminum frames are extruded, meaning the material is melted and forced thru a die. With pultrusion, continuous glass fibers are pulled thru a resin impregnation bath and then a heated die where the resin sets into the desired shape. Here’s a pultrusion machine in action:

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Low Income Housing From Recycled Materials

April 18th, 2009 by Seldom

Dan Phillips helps people build houses for themselves out of mostly salvaged materials.

:: Groovy Green

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Missed Opportunities in Structural Sustainability

April 16th, 2009 by brinker

April, 2009
Structural Sustainability – discussions of sustainability and preservation as they pertain to structural engineering
Missed Opportunities in Structural Sustainability
Ben Hays, P.E., S.E., LEED A.P. and David Cocke, S.E.

Many structural engineers view the sustainable building movement as affording them little opportunity. Additionally, the predominant metric for measuring sustainable buildings, the LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) rating system, offers few points for specifically structural solutions. To date, engineers following the LEED scorecard can recommend fly ash in concrete, recycled materials in steel, and sustainably harvested FSC wood. Beyond that, however, most engineers agree in principle with the comments of a LEED consultant in a recent meeting the authors attended: “As structural engineers, you guys can’t do much for sustainability.” This article argues otherwise, looking at the growing link between the reuse of buildings and sustainability and the role structural engineers can play in this type of design.

In 1987, the Bruntland Commission issued a report to the United Nations that included what has become the most widely accepted definition of sustainability as: “development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs”[1]. Since that time, most discussion about sustainability has included three aspects: environmental, economic, and social sustainability [2]. The common approach to sustainability from structural engineers (where there has been any approach at all) has focused almost exclusively on the environmental elements, in particular specifying reusable or renewable materials. There is a great need for broader thinking about sustainability from the structural engineering community. As engineers, we can significantly expand our impact on environmental sustainability, as well as contribute to economic and social sustainability, with only minor shifts in our thinking and practice. To do this, we must first understand the concept of embodied energy as well as become more willing to work with existing buildings.
Embodied Energy and Existing Buildings

When a building is constructed, significant amounts of energy are consumed in extracting, processing, and assembling raw materials into the finished product. Studies suggest that a building’s embodied energy ranges anywhere from 15 to 20 percent of its total life cycle energy use [2]. This reality lends credence to Carl Elefante’s adage: “the greenest building is one that is already built”[3]. If a structure is demolished at or before the end of a building’s 50-year service life, all of its embodied energy is wasted. This energy waste is in addition to the physical waste created, as well as the energy required in transporting the physical waste to a landfill. Another increasingly selected option exists for the design team, namely adaptively reusing the building.

Recent projects serves as an example of how reusing buildings makes sustainable sense. The authors completed an adaptive reuse of a 1950s, 2-story concrete warehouse (Figure 1). The building is not on the national or local historic registers and the owner could easily have chosen to demolish it and erected a new, similar sized building in its place. Instead, it was decided to retrofit and reuse the building, though not necessarily for sustainable reasons. Using an online calculator, the embodied energy in the 50,000 SF building is 56,500,000 million BTUs [4]. In addition, the energy required to demolish the building would be 775,000 MBTUs, a small percentage of the embodied energy. Finally, by not demolishing the building, an equivalent amount of energy saved by not having to construct a new building, another 56,500,000 MBTU. While any number of comparisons could be made for this quantity of energy, the total energy represented in the sum embodied energy+demolition+new construction is roughly equivalent to 1,000,000 gallons of gasoline. Ironically, a new energy efficient building would take longer than 50 years for its own efficiencies to equal, and thereby pay back, this same amount of energy.
Figure 1: Reuse versus demo: embodied energy calculations.

The numbers related to a building’s embodied energy present a compelling case for expanding our impact on environmental sustainability beyond specifying materials. The concept of embodied energy does not require a cognitive leap of faith. The challenge for engineers is what Patrice Frey quotes as: “shifting the presumption on stewardship of built heritage to favor reuse” rather than demolition [2]. Many engineers, whether through training or experience, do not like working with existing buildings. This is even more the case in California, where “seismic concerns” regularly trump desires to keep otherwise well-performing buildings. If we want to have an impact on sustainability, we must change this prevailing belief within our profession and be more vocal about our efforts in our industry.
Opportunities for Structural Sustainability

The opportunity presented to engineers at the intersection of reusing buildings and sustainability is significant. The Brookings Institute estimates that, by 2030, the United States will replace 82 billion square feet of its current building stock [6]. Our willingness to work with, rather than preemptively condemn many of these buildings, will go a long way toward contributing to sustainability. Architects, developers, and building owners look to engineers to provide honest recommendations regarding the potential of existing structures. Firms that become experts in working with, rather than avoiding, existing buildings will gain a competitive edge as market conditions and sustainable concerns increasingly favor building reuse.

One might look at the idea of reusing buildings and embodied energy and think that we are merely expanding our impact on environmental sustainability alone. While on the surface this is true, reusing existing buildings also promotes the economic and social aspects of sustainability. According to a report by the Brookings Institute, the decision to reinvest rather than tear down or abandon a building “presents convincing evidence that ‘preservation pays’ when viewed in economic terms.” This payment comes in the form of driving economic growth, job creation, friendliness to small businesses, and promoting high wage jobs. All of these are forms of sustainable economic development when viewed long term. Additionally, reusing existing buildings adds to social sustainability by protecting social diversity and maintaining our sense of place in our increasingly globalized world. Patrice Frey expands greatly on how existing buildings promote social and economic sustainability, and the reader would be well served to read her paper [2].
Conclusions

In closing, we return to the question of how LEED recognizes the contributions of the structural engineer to sustainability. At present, LEED primarily credits environmental sustainability in the form of material specification; recycled content in concrete and steel, and sustainably harvested wood. In its current form, LEED awards the same number of credits for reusing 75% of the building’s walls, floors, and roof as it does for specifying bike racks and showers for 5% of a building’s occupants. At present, it does not address the idea of embodied energy directly and does not take into account the cultural heritage associated with preserving buildings. LEED 2009, which launched in March of this year, gives much greater credit than its predecessor to metrics such as Community Connectivity and Alternative Transportation, both of which favor existing buildings. In addition, there is now an Alternative Compliance Path that specifically recognizes an existing building’s embodied energy. Lastly, a Sustainable Preservation Coalition has been formed to incorporate preservation, social, and cultural values into LEED, though probably not until its next release in 2011 [5].

Admittedly, the choice to reuse existing buildings does not rest solely in the hands of structural engineers though our opinion often becomes the deal-breaker. We must partner with owners, architects, and developers in order to maintain our built heritage. Engineers have a more extensive role to play than merely specifying sustainable materials. If understood and promoted properly, the intersection of sustainability and reusing buildings affords structural engineers a great opportunity for professional development, marketing, and occasion to contribute to a greener future.▪
Ben Hays, P.E., S.E., LEED A.P. is a Design Engineer with Structural Focus, a Structural Engineering firm in Los Angeles. He can be reached at bhays@structuralfocus.com.
David Cocke, S.E. is owner and principal of Structural Focus. David currently sits as the SEAOC-appointed Alternate member of the California Historical Building Safety Board. He can be reached at dcocke@structuralfocus.com.
References

[1] Brundtland, Gro Harlem and World Commission on Environment and Development. [1987]. Report of the World Commission on Environment and Development: “Our Common Future.”

[2] Frey, Patrice. [2007]. Making the Case: Historic Preservation as Sustainable Development. (www.preservationnation.org/issues/sustainability/additional-resources/DiscussionDraft_10_15.pdf, accessed 1/16/09)

[3] Elefante, Carl. [2007]. The Greenest Building Is…One That Is Already Built. Forum Journal. Vol 21, No 4.

[4] www.TheGreenestBuilding.org

[5] Campagna, Barbara. [2009]. How Changes to LEED™ Will Benefit Existing and Historic Buildings. (www.aia.org/hrc_a_200812_campagna, accessed 1/16/09)

[6] Nelson, A.C. (2004) Toward a New Metropolis: The Opportunity to Rebuild America. Brookings Institute. (http://www.brookings.edu/reports/2004/12metropolitanpolicy_nelson.aspx)

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Thermal Mass

April 15th, 2009 by Seldom

In our climate, even on the hottest days of summer, the outdoor nighttime temperature drops below the indoor temperature. Using massive materials inside the insulated envelope, we can take advantage of that diurnal temperature swing to reduce the amplitude of the indoor temperature swings. The mass absorbs heat during the day and radiates it back at night.  If we do a good job of keeping that mass shaded during the summer there’s no need for mechanical cooling and the dog has a nice cool floor to lie on.

Thermal Inertia
Talking about thermal mass in more detail gets a little more complicated. I’m afraid we’re going to need a few definitions:

  • Heat capacity is the ability of a material to absorb heat.
  • Diffusivity is a measure of the speed heat moves thru a material.
  • Effusivity describes the ability of a material to exchange heat with it’s surroundings. It is similar to emissivity (as in low-e or low emissivity windows).

Good materials for thermal storage have high thermal inertia.  They have a high heat capacity, but low diffusivity and effusivity.  Metals don’t work well for thermal storage.  They can take on a lot of heat because they have a high heat capacity, but they can’t store it very long because they also have high diffusivity and effusivity.  Metal heats up quickly, but it gives it right back. Clay is much better for storing heat in a timeframe that’s useful for conditioning houses.  It has a high heat capacity, but low diffusivity and effusivity. It’ll take all day to heat up a cold earthen floor sitting in a room with a warm air temperature, but it will take all night for it to radiate that heat back. That’s what we’re looking for.

mathis

Even when the two items are identical in temperature, the metal feels colder. Why? Wood is not a good conductor of heat, so it is slow to absorb the heat from your hand. Metal has higher thermal effusivity, so the heat from your hand flows into the metal quickly – creating the sensation of it feeling cold.

Mathis Instruments

In our climate massive construction is awesome in the summer. The downside is that dense materials like tile, concrete, and compressed earth block also feel cool to the touch during the winter. That’s why European stone castle walls are covered with tapestries.

Mean Radiant Temperature
To derive your Mean Radiant Temperature, look around you and take the temperature of every surface you see. You are exchanging heat with all of those surfaces. Surfaces warmer than you radiate heat to you and all the other colder surfaces. You’re just another room surface exchanging heat with all the others. To be comfortable all the surfaces around you need to be within a few degrees of each other (and you), and in a well insulated house with good windows they will be. However, believe it or not, our skin does not have good temperature sensors. Instead, we have excellent heat flux sensors. All of the surfaces in a room can be exactly the same temperature, and some will still feel colder than others when we touch them. The surfaces that feel colder are the ones with higher effusivity. The castle tapestries have low effusivity so they feel warmer than high effusivity stone.

Radiant Heating
In a typical (minimally insulated and drafty) house, radiant floor heating feels great because the mass is heated up to about 80 deg F. The floor radiates heat up to other surfaces, and brings the mean radiant temperature up so we’re nice and toasty. The problems are:

  1. radiating 80 deg F from the entire floor is a lot of heat.  A house that needs that much heat is wasting a lot of energy, and it should be insulated better.
  2. you lose a lot of ability for a slab to absorb free heat coming in the windows from the sun if the mass has already been heated by radiant tubing.

In an efficient well sealed house, a conventional concrete radiant floor heating slab won’t have to rise above about 73 deg F to meet the heating load (assuming the entire floor is heated). You will wonder if the heat is really on because it won’t feel warm. Even though the floor slab is adding heat to the house and the mean radiant temperature is high enough that we aren’t radiating much heat to the other surfaces, concrete has a relatively high effusivity. It exchanges heat with us pretty easily and feels cool even with a slight temperature difference. In a passive solar house, high effusivity materials located in areas that get direct solar gain will feel tactically warm on sunny days, but those same materials in northern rooms without solar exposure or in southern rooms on cloudy days won’t.

Recommendations
If you use radiant heat, insulate the house well enough that a small area of radiant will heat the entire house. Locate it in northern rooms (especially bathrooms) that can’t be heated by the sun.

Concentrate high heat capacity materials in the south rooms where they will do the most good. Use low-medium effusivity materials to store heat. Assuming no radiant heat, a north bath or kitchen would be better off with low effusivity wood or cork floors and wood countertops, but the same room located on the south would benefit from medium effusivity concrete countertops and tile floors.  Likewise, soft earthen plasters will feel warmer than hard venetian lime plasters, and soft lime and gypsum plasters will feel warmer than harder cement based plasters.

This spreadsheet shows the effusivity and interface temperature (how warm the surface feels when you touch it) for a few typical materials. I assumed an 85 degree hand surface temperature and all other surfaces at 70 degrees, but you can go to the spreadsheet and change those values as you see fit: Google Docs | Thermal Effusivity.

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Mycelium Insulation

April 14th, 2009 by Seldom

Ecovative Design is producing SIPs panels using dehydrated mushroom roots.

We use fungal mycelium, which is basically the roots of mushrooms. The mycelium acts as a resin to bond agricultural byproducts together into a rigid material. We don’t let the mycelium grow long enough to produce mushrooms. That means you never have to worry about spores or allergens.

mycelium

Mycelium is incredible stuff. It builds topsoil. It digests petroleum. It can be used to kill termites and carpenter ants. It can be used to make fuel and cure diseases. Watch Paul Stamets’ TED presentation:

:: Ecovativedesign.com

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Back in Blackle

April 13th, 2009 by Clarke

This just in from Axil.  It’s a new Google search engine called “Blackle”.

blackle

The idea is that since the screen is mostly black. You use less energy while browsing. Makes sense to me.  I have no idea how much BS factor is involved.  I just like saying “Blackle”. Their spiel is pasted below. Or go here blackle spiel .

blackle1

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Efficient Pots and Pans

April 13th, 2009 by Seldom

At first I thought this looked like an infomercial gimmick, but I was pleasantly surprised to discover that the Turbo Pot is a legitimate great idea.

eneron-pic1

Eneron makes pots and pans with heat exchanging fins on the bottom to increase the efficiency of a gas range.  They work just like cooling fins on a computer chip heat sink, but in reverse.  That simple change raises the cooking efficiency from 25-30% to 40-60%.

Because the heat transfer is more efficient, the time required to boil water or cook food is reduced.  The test results shown here are for heating 20 pounds of water from 70 to 200 deg F:

eneron-graph1

For more detailed test results see:  Fisher-Nickel | Prototype Commercial Stock Pot Testing

Eneron offers these usage tips on their site:

  • You can lower the burner to save energy while keeping your normal pace in the kitchen.
  • When the burner is on high, you need to bear in mind the cooking time will be shortened.
  • Keep it clean like a standard pot.
  • If soup, sauce, etc. spills out, typically it will go to the tip of the fins and won’t get between the fins. A brush usually cleans up the spill.
  • Treat the pot with normal respect you would have your personal belongings— don’t bang the fins on anything. Even though bent fins at the edge of the pot won’t affect the performance of the pot, a well maintained pot will save you money in two ways in the long run.

I didn’t see any info about where to buy one or how much they cost, but I’m sure Eneron will be happy to help:  Eneron.us

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Videos of a Strawbale and Adobe Houses in an Earthquake

April 12th, 2009 by Seldom

This video shows a strawbale building built by PAKSBAB being subjected to a simulated earthquake. Background by Darcy Donovan:

On October 8, 2005, the northern mountainous region of Pakistan was struck by a 7.6 magnitude earthquake which killed more than 100,000 people and rendered more than 3 million homeless due to unsafe building construction. Modern conventional building methods are largely unaffordable for the poor in developing countries such as Pakistan. As a solution, Pakistan Straw Bale and Appropriate Building (PAKSBAB) is developing unique earthquake-resistant straw bale building methods that are affordable, energy efficient, and utilize locally-resourced renewable materials.

The PAKSBAB gallery shows how they are constructed: paksbab.org

From Buildinggreen.com:

The quake-resistant buildings designed by PAKSBAB (Pakistan Straw Bale and Appropriate Building) are intended to be affordable, energy efficient, and locally built with readily available materials.

Bamboo rods and nylon fishing net act as the reinforcement and tie-down system; the netting is wrapped under a soil-cement-encased gravel-bag foundation (made with old vegetable sacks), up the load-bearing baled-straw wall, and attached to the wooden top plates. The wall-tall bamboo, which also engages both the foundation and the top plate, is attached upright in opposing pairs on either side of the wall at frequent spacings and ‘sewn’ together through the bales, providing flexible resistance to out-of-plane forces. The whole assembly is covered with earthen plaster. The roofing is light corrugated steel. The hand-made structural straw bales — there are no posts or other bearing members — are smaller than those produced by automatic balers, which are rare in developing countries.

Here are some videos of adobe buildings being shaken:

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