Katherine Faulkner
Username
Katherine Faulkner
Proposer First Name
Katherine
Proposer Email
katie@west-work.com
Proposer Last Name
Faulkner
Proposer Company/Organization
West Work
Proposer Job Title
Principal
Boston 2023 Areas of Focus
Proposer Additional Info
West Work's mission is to improve the built environment through a process that considers carbon and energy performance from conceptual design. To that end, we sponsor Highland Park Technologies as an R+D company focused on high-performance envelopes. HPT is currently working with US DOE on developing an exterior cladding approach.
Proposed Session Description
Should being petroleum-based eliminate foam from consideration as a green building material? Is mineral wool a better option? Or should we deploy a bio-based material (e.g. hemp, wood fiber, or cellulose) with an obviously smaller carbon footprint? This session considers the building envelope options currently available for tackling the urgent problem of reducing existing building energy consumption. Options for greener, cleaner materials will increase with demand, but can we afford to wait?
Diversity and Inclusiveness
Among the greatest opportunities to improve existing building performance is the scheduled renovations of affordable housing. Holders of multi-family housing assets generally update their properties every 25-30 years. These upgrades come with opportunities, and sometimes obligations to move to electrification of building systems/appliances and dramatically improve building performance. Like all real estate development, these renovations are dollar-driven. Renovations that reduce infiltration and insulate the building envelope must be cost effective and easy to install or they will not be viable for millions of square feet of affordable housing.
Learning Objectives
Articulate the differences among available foam insulation products as well as hemp, mineral wool, and wood fiber as options for improving existing building energy performance
Draw conclusions about emerging building materials and evaluate their current market presence
Differentiate between embodied carbon and carbon footprint when discussing building insulation
Discuss the benefits, drawbacks, and embodied energy of several insulated sheathing options
Has this session been presented before?
No
Target Audiences Level of Expertise
Level 2 - Some prior knowledge helpful.
Session Format
Debate between opposing viewpoints
Session Format Details
A moderated panel discussion in the form of a debate. One speaker will represent current industry; another will represent the emergence of green building products. Audience questions can be submitted in form of an app.
Recommended Length
60-minute session
Strongest Content Connection - Boston 2023
Comments about your speaker roster
Jarrett Davis: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jarrett-davis-5159a97/
Jason Todd: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jasonmtodd/
Reviewer 1
Graeff, Marcell
Reviewer 2
Bossie, Greg
Proposal #
136
Committee Decision
Being Considered
Presenters
Full Description
Residential buildings are responsible for 40% of the energy consumed in the United States, and 76% of spent electricity. Older buildings can facilitate considerable wasted energy through air leakage and ineffective insulation of the exterior walls. Electrification alone will strain domestic grid capacity if not paired with an insulated and sealed building envelope. This is particularly evident in the cold and very cold regions of the US, including the Northeast, which has a high number of wood-framed mid-rise multifamily buildings.
When given the opportunity to retrofit a building, designers and builders are forced to balance the energy it takes to save energy. Off-site manufacturing, prefabrication, and low carbon building materials generally lessen environmental impact of a building renovation, but may prove illusive when evaluated for cost, performance, and availability. For many retrofits, it is impractical to relocate tenants such that less expensive materials with plentiful supply may prove to be more effective even if the long-term environmental costs are greater.
Funding incentives and an entrepreneurial culture are widening both awareness and options for materials and products that improve energy performance. In order to increase demand for green materials while scaling up building retrofits, architects and builders need to be nimble when designing for high performance.