Sefaira: Delivering Affordable Net-Zero Energy Housing
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Sefaira: Delivering Affordable Net-Zero Energy Housing
The eCasa housing project was designed to deliver a series of net-zero, affordable housing prototypes in Washington, D.C., for low-income families. Using Sefaira, nonprofit architecture firm Inscape Publico balanced building envelope performance and renewable energy generation in the late design stage to achieve net-zero.
Mi Casa Inc., a nonprofit organisation, provides affordable housing opportunities to low and moderate-income families to sustain diverse and healthy communities in the Washington D.C. and Baltimore areas. To address the complex changes impacting neighbourhoods in the greater D.C. area and ensure scalability, Mi Casa collaborated with the Department of Housing and Community Development.
Project type: Affordable housing for low-income families
Location: Washington D.C., USA
Building program: ResidentialFloor area/stories /occupancy: 2 x blocks of 6 housing units
Performance goal: Net-zero energy
Navigating project limitations
Inscape Publico had designed and specified the building blocks but wanted to understand their performance and optimise the project where possible. The project needed to juggle a limited budget, a limited palette of building materials, and a tight project timeline. Using Sefaira analysis enabled the team to optimise the changeable factors within the project and demonstrate that the project was on track to achieve net-zero energy.
Site plan showing the location of both blocks on adjacent streets.
To achieve their goals, the design team needed to:
- calculate the baseline building performance based on specified building materials.
- minimise energy consumption to achieve net-zero by utilising high-performance construction and specifying high-efficiency appliances and systems.
- calculate how much renewable energy would be generated by pre-specified solar photovoltaic panels to confirm the quantity required to achieve net-zero.
- minimise annual operating costs for the inhabitants by specifying highly efficient water fixtures.
To get started, the design team set up the analysis model, inputting pre-determined envelope and HVAC values and baseline variables such as occupancy, lighting power density, plug load, temperature set points, and diversity factors. Next, potential strategies were investigated:
Shading type and depth: Using Sefaira’s response curves, an optimum 2.5 ft deep horizontal projection was specified over each glazed opening. This reduced annual space cooling by 14%.
Water fixtures: To reduce waste and operating costs, high-efficiency water fixtures were specified.
Annual operating costs were reduced by 37% because less energy was required to heat water and water usage was much less overall.
“I would use Sefaira at an even earlier stage to optimise the envelope instead of simply analysing the materials and details we had already established," Stefan Schwarzkopf, Design Director at Inscape Publico.
For example, the predetermined roof assembly R-value was quite high; however, Sefaira showed that a roof assembly with a lower R-value performed just as well. Knowing this information earlier on could have enabled the team to make more cost-effective building material and detailing choices.
Sefaira enabled the Inscape Publico and Mi Casa team to calculate the annual energy consumption, investigate energy-saving strategies, and apply renewable energy generation, helping the project reach net-zero energy status.
"Sefaira takes the guesswork out of the process of evaluating various design choices to find the ones with optimal impact, helping the design team to fluidly refine not only the project design itself but also the project goals," Stefan Schwarzkopf, Design Director at Inscape Publico.
Sefaira: need to know more?
Want to know more about how Sefaira can help your architecture or engineering projects to achieve more sustainable designs? Email our product specialists who will be happy help and advise on how Sefaira can make a difference to your projects.
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Article originally published on blog.sketchup.com, 2021