Green Building Bible, Fourth Edition |
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These two books are the perfect starting place to help you get to grips with one of the most vitally important aspects of our society - our homes and living environment. PLEASE NOTE: A download link for Volume 1 will be sent to you by email and Volume 2 will be sent to you by post as a book. |
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Posted By: rhamduHow can we exploit ideas of thermodynamic efficiency, entropy, free energy, exergy - whatever - in the design, construction and use of buildings?
Posted By: SteamyTeaMaybe the traditional house that is longer than it is wide is an old model that needs rethinking.
Posted By: Paul in Montrealas a standard lot size here was 25x110 feetSo you still using feet and inches over there
Posted By: rhamduhere we are on planet Earth, astride a mighty energy-flow, from the sun's surface at 6000K to the depths of space at 3KI like that - 'astride'.
Posted By: SteamyTeaStorage seems to be the key, with long term storage being the holy grail.thats fine for everything from now on, what about the vast amounts of existing housing stock.
New housing could/should, as far as possible be orientated to take full advantgae of local solar conditions. Hard in practice without designing towns and cites on a grid system, but I am sure the artistic amongst us may be able to sort this one.
Posted By: rhamduDjh pointed out that the term 'exergy' is widely usedAnd there's 'emergy' too - what's that? Not to mention Negawatts.
Posted By: barneyGenerally the one thing we should avoid doing.Now, the problem's solved - can readily make electricity from solar energy - the answer to
Posted By: barneytake something simple like glass manufacture - how do we do it ?
Posted By: barneyFor sure we have an emerging (or maybe a re-emerging knowledge) of how to harness solar energy - but only at a very basic level - to go further needs technology that previous generations never had.True - and that technology is emerging at tremendous speed, on a human-history timescale.
Posted By: barneyright back to us living in real caves, we've burnt something for heat, light, food preparation, security and well being. Generally we've burnt carbon - we are almost genetically programmed to do soTrue, but always renewable carbon.
Posted By: barneyPersonally speaking, I'm all for passive solar...
Posted By: Ed DaviesPosted By: barneyPersonally speaking, I'm all for passive solar...
I'm not, for exactly the reasons which are the subject of this thread. Passive solar tends to collect heat in a rather low-grade (i.e., low-temperature) form making storage and control more difficult whereas active solar thermal (solar collectors rather than large windows) gives you higher temperatures with increased flexibility of use.
Posted By: Ed Davies... heat in a rather low-grade (i.e., low-temperature) form making storage and control more difficultNot necessarily, just needs re-thinking - maybe that's difficult?
Posted By: Ed Davies... whereas active solar thermal (solar collectors rather than large windows) gives you higher temperatures with increased flexibility of useNot necessarily higher, but higher temps do enable lazier but wasteful solutions.
Posted By: barneyif we are going to heat molten tin (and keep it molten) for float glass productionOnce melted, the only input needed depends on how well the process is insulated - don't tell me that can't be reduced to a trickle. For that reason glass is great - new stuff v largely recycled, and in future no doubt carefully saved and re-used. Unlike e.g. Portland cement, whose chemical-embodied energy can't be reduced and should be blacklisted by all greenies. Anyway, silicon/glass PVs will be superseded by organic compounds pretty soon.
Posted By: barneywe need to throw, again, vast resources at buildings (and at the component manufacture for buildings) that could easily outweigh the demand reductions we are trying to achieveDon't think so - it's clear that even if embodied energy has to rise as you say, the in-use savings vastly outweigh that. However it's true that the embodied input is 'now', when the planet can least tolerate it, while the savings are spread over the next 30, 80 or 200yrs. It's not a lack of technology or organisational ability, just a matter of fossil-profit interests hence lack of will and priority - does the govt want to create a new mass-employment serious-retrofit industry or not? Apparently not.
Posted By: renewablejohnthe Infra Red spectrum is used for heating the thermal oilto that temp right thro Dec/Jan? Really? If not 100% sufficient thro Dec/Jan then you still need boiler etc.
Posted By: djhPassive solar is much cheaper than active solar because you have to have windows anyway, so you may as well optimise the solar gain from them.
Posted By: fostertomNot necessarily higher, but higher temps do enable lazier but wasteful solutions.
Posted By: Ed DaviesHowever, once you have enough for reasonable light levels, a view and means of escape I'd dispute that extra window area (with greater cost than plain wall and greater heat losses when the sun is not shining) is much, if at all, cheaper overall than the marginal cost of extra solar collectors beyond those needed for DHW anyway.
Whatever, I think the cost differential between active and passive is often exaggerated while at the same time the difference in value of high- vs low-grade heat is discounted.
Posted By: fostertomHowever it's true that the embodied input is 'now', when the planet can least tolerate it, while the savings are spread over the next 30, 80 or 200yrs. It's not a lack of technology or organisational ability, just a matter of fossil-profit interests hence lack of will and priority - does the govt want to create a new mass-employment serious-retrofit industry or not? Apparently not.
Posted By: djhI don't think it's a question of whether the government wants to create a new mass-employment serious-retrofit industry or not. It's a question of whether they can find a way to pay for oneWell, fiscal Tories say no, trapped as they are by their artificial 'Money' construct/concept. Keynsians say print the money (if you must) and go for it - didn't do US any harm in the 30s, in fact all that new infrastructure and wage-led domestic spending quantum-leaped them into pole position come WW2.
Posted By: barneyWell Tom, I guess you've never been involved in glass production or you would realise the futility of that statementI've noticed that rank-and-file insiders in any industry (incl architecture and building), who are immersed in how it's done, are least able to imagine quantum-leap changes - but those do keep on happening, overturning conventional wisdoms. And you're extending that to pour cold water on the practicability of much that's mentioned about both the subject of this topic (conservation of energy-grade rather than just energy) and also about the possibilities for radical energy-demand reduction in industry. We on GBF seem to agree the latter is essential - well this is what it will take, and is how it can happen.
Posted By: barneyThe high cost items are energy in the furnace ...Once melted, isn't temp maintenance say 50% a problem of effective insulation?
Posted By: barney... and the molten tin float pond ...Is the tin consumed?
Posted By: barney... and the soda ash used in the glassWhat if much higher recycled %age?
Posted By: fostertomPosted By: renewablejohnthe Infra Red spectrum is used for heating the thermal oilto that temp right thro Dec/Jan? Really? If not 100% sufficient thro Dec/Jan then you still need boiler etc.