Showing posts with label 40 under 40. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 40 under 40. Show all posts

Friday, 12 April 2013

The "Sunlighthouse" project, by Juri Troy Architects

Following their recent 40 Under 40 Award, we contacted Juri Troy Architects (from Wien, Austria) to congratulate them for the achievement. We also invited them to share with us a project to publish in our blog. Juri Troy Architects accepted our invitation by sending us some information about their "Sunlighthouse" project. It is our pleasure to make this type of divulgation, so we invite all our architect readers to send us their projects, for us to publish them in our space.

Please send your information to david.cardoso@dimscale.com.
Architect Juri Troy

















"Sunlighthouse" by Juri Troy Architects
Pressbaum, Austria

Text sent by Juri Troy Architects: 
"The Velux Sunlighthouse in Pressbaum near Vienna is the first co²-neutral single-family-house in Austria. It was completed end of October 2010. The project was launched about two years ago by the Velux company as a part of their Pan European experiment, the so called “model home 2020” project. The goal is to develop, build and analyze six different houses in five European countries, each following its own approach to progressive and sustainable building and living.

The challenge of the Austrian model home was to create a house that taps the full potential of the plot (like the wonderful views, exposure to the sunlight, maximum of privacy between the existing houses, …) on one hand and to develop an energy and ecology concept to erase the ecological footprint of the house within the next thirty years on the other hand. What distinguishes this project from many ambitious preceding projects is the need and wish to combine minimized numerical values for energy efficiency with ambitious architecture.

Fortunately the clients had chosen an anything but ideal plot for the Austrian model home. It is a slender and long piece of land that declines towards a beautiful (but shading) wood with high trees in the Southeast. The plot is flanked by a dense hedge in the Northeast and a high wall in the Southwest. The two close situated neighboring houses on both sides leave just a little scope for privacy in between. The wonderful view to the lake which is situated in the valley in the East can only be caught by getting a step deeper into the ground. In short: A design concept that uses a maximum of the potential that the plot offers had to be more than a lip service, if the ambitious targets were supposed to be accomplished. This makes the results of the project even more precious as affordable plots in a mountainous country like Austria rarely offer ideal conditions.

The energy concept of the building was developed in collaboration with the Danube University of Krems. The building equipment includes a high performing heat pump, 43 m² mono crystalline photovoltaic roof panels, 8 m²  thermal solar panels for hot water and a controlled air system with heat recovery. The heat insulation of the shell surface of the house is optimized and the windows fulfill passive house requirements. A (in Austria) so far disregarded demand was to obtain a maximum of daylight to lower the energy consume for artificial light. The reached daylight factor in every single room is on average five times higher than the usual standard. The roof and facade windows were strategically positioned to provide stunning views, to maximize passive solar energy, to enable an optimal, natural ventilation during summer time and to minimize the thermal losses during winter time. In fact the Sunlighthouse’s total window area is equal to 42% of its floor area. Like the outside planking, the interior fitting is made of spruce wood. To keep the wooden surface bright and avoid darkening, it was treated with white pigmented natural oil.

All materials had to be evaluated by their ecological qualities before they were authorized to use. The Austrian Institute for Construction Biology and Ecology (IBO) also benchmarked the co² valuation of every assembled material. Using locally grown and processed wood as main material to optimize the co² values are self-explanatory, but as the building is positioned in a hill it was also necessary to use concrete for all the grounding construction elements. Instead of ordinary Portland cement (which shows a quite poor co² balance) blast-furmace-slag, a spin-off product from steel production with extremely low co²  output, was used to mix the concrete. The applied insulation material is sheep wool and recycled cellulose.
In the end the goal was accomplished. The Sunlighthouse will produce more energy than the building and using of the house consumes, which makes it a small “power station” and a beacon project for further conscious and sustainable planning and building."


 

Monday, 11 March 2013

Pedro Campos Costa among the 40 Under 40 award

Campos Costa is among the 40 Under 40 architects
The Portuguese architect Pedro Campos Costa is one of the 40 architects recognized by the European Centre for Architecture, Art, Design and Urban Studies. This list is composed only by European architects that didn't reach yet the age of forty. The award intends to "spotlight the next generation of successful architects who will impact Europe's future living and working environments, cities, towns, and rural areas in the decades to come", according to the 40 Under 40 website page.

The work of Pedro Campos Costa is characterized by his effort to deal directly with the industry contributing with new ideas for innovative constructive solutions, always supported by the tradition values. His office also values the work with more susteinable materials like cork and cardboard, being also interested on social projects.

Lisbon Aquarium New Extension, by Pedro Campos Costa
His project on Lisbon Aquarium New Extension is an example of a preoccupation with the energy efficiency issues. "A recurrent theme in investigative practice, which also exists here, is the pre-occupation of creating architecture that can combines aesthetic demands with good sustainable performance. The formal solution of the building’s façade is a response to bioclimatic issues, with opened and closed elements allowing for passive ventilation and solar shading", says Campo Costa on the project's page in his website.

Also the furniture brand "Caco", created by the architect, shows that can be produced good solutions regarding both design and sustainability scopes.

cork chaise long

rolling sofa

mono stool

Below is the full list of this year's 40 Under 40 award.

KEVIN CHU - UNITED KINGDOM
JEROME VILLEMARD AND ERIC BARTOLO - FRANCE
MAG.ARCH. JURI TROY - AUSTRIA
NICOLAS TOURY, ANTOINE VALLET - FRANCE
ALEKSANDAR JANKOVIC - FRANCE
JOHANN FROELIGER - FRANCE
JAINE MAGÉN AND FRANCISCO J. MAGÉN - SPAIN
LUKAS GÖBL - AUSTRIA
ULRIK RAYSSE - DENMARK
BERARDO MATALUCCI - ITALY
BERRANGER JEROME - FRANCE
PEPE GASCÓN - SPAIN
STURARI JONNY, KOHLS JOHAN, PETIT CAMILLE - FRANCE
VLADO VALKOF - BULGARIA
BASAK AKKOYUNLU - TURKEY
CARLOS BARBA - FRANCE
ROMAN RUTKOWSKI - POLAND
SAMUEL DELMAS - FRANCE
PEDRO CAMPOS COSTA - PORTUGAL
MARIJN SCHENK - THE NETHERLANDS
JAN THEISSEN, SONJA NAGEL - GERMANY
BART REUSER - THE NETHERLANDS
ANNEMIEK BLEUMINK - THE NETHERLANDS
MICHEL SCHREINEMACHERS - THE NETHERLANDS
YIANNA BOUYIOUKOU - GREECE
BENJAMIN COLBOC - FRANCE
VOINCHET - FRANCE
VINCENT STÉPHANIE - FRANCE
PALATRE OLIVIER ET TIPHAINE LECLERE - FRANCE
CHRIS BRIFFA - MALTA
FREDERIC CHARTIER - FRANCE
DERIN SARIYER - TURKEY
CHRISTIANE BAUSBACK - GERMANY