Data Drives Controls and Energy Saving in Schools
Designing for Comfort: From Basic Principles to New Tools for Design and Certification
Getting Energy Efficiency Projects to the Finish Line Using Your Financing Toolkit
Net Zero, Passive House, Embodied Carbon: Why Healthy Materials Are Essential to High Performing Building Designs
Whether net zero, Passive House, or other certification is your objective, incorporating a healthy materials strategy is as essential as figuring out how you will design the building envelope and mechanical systems. Thoughtful selection of materials can help design teams get a better handle on the embodied carbon impact of those materials choices and thus help buildings achieve better embodied carbon outcomes. In this active, high-participation session, participants will identify where harmful chemicals might reside in building products using the “Six Classes” approach.
Non-Wires Solutions: Lessons Learned and Insights for Future Projects
The Extra Mile: How Owners and Tenants Work Together to Build the Best Space Possible
Owners are making as many updates and changes as possible in the competitive world of commercial office space, but what are the tenants doing? How can owners and managers help tenants to build the most efficient space possible while not wasting time or rent dollars? This will be a discussion of lessons learned, successes and failures, constraints and timelines along with how the market is changing to better support tenant fit-outs. Learn from owners, tenants and engineers what the solutions can be to this ongoing challenge.
Rewards and Risks of Highly Insulated Envelopes for Multifamily Buildings
Largely thanks to their better form-factor, large multifamily buildings are typically able to achieve the Passive House standard without the extremely high levels of insulation common on smaller buildings. However, there are cases where very high levels of insulation may be needed, particularly when working in dense urban areas.
Solar Soars Above & Beyond the Rooftop
There has never been a better time for architects, designers, project managers and property owners to get creative about how to integrate solar into multi-family and commercial buildings with large energy requirements. Raising the solar PV panels above the roof allows for more kilowatts while creating intriguing canopied spaces (i.e., recreational areas, roof gardens and green roofs) with both indoor and outdoor benefits.