North House: Solar Powered House [Bartram, Woodbury]
VIEW THE BOOK HERE:Flash: www.morethangreen.org/northhouse/
PDF: www.morethangreen.org/northhouse/NorthHouse.pdf
WATCH THE VIDEOS HERE:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LqwCRpkIVXQ&NR=1
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mwcMs_V3XqM&feature=related
Download CDRN Press Release Here
Read the Granville Magazine article here ![]()
Students and faculty from Simon Fraser University’s School of
Interactive Arts and Technology (SIAT) join with colleagues from the
University of Waterloo and Ryerson University to design a high-tech,
solar-powered house. The house will join others on The Mall in
Washington, DC, as part of the US Department of Energy’s Solar
Decathlon.
The building, NORTH HOUSE, will be entered in the 2009 Solar Decathlon,
where it will compete against houses designed by 19 other North
American universities.
Each of the three universities brings something unique to the project.
Waterloo is leading the project and concentrating on off-grid housing
and responsive structure and "skin", Ryerson will contribute energy
modeling and analysis, while SFU will develop an “adaptive living
interface” that allows the house’s occupants to adjust energy settings
easily through touch controls built into the walls or remotely via
cellphone and computer. Reflecting its strengths in design, SIAT will
create publicity materials, including a website, interpretative signage
and a graphic identity for the project.
The U.S. Department of Energy and the National Renewable Energy
Laboratory are using the Decathlon to encourage the broad adoption of
sun-powered homes. The entrants will be presented to the general public
in a “solar village” outside the Smithsonian Institution in Oct 2009.
Team North, as the SFU/Waterloo/Ryerson co-operative is called, hopes
that NORTH HOUSE will then be displayed at the 2010 Winter Olympics in
Vancouver.
Leading SIAT’s efforts will be professors Lyn Bartram and Rob Woodbury. Bartram is an assistant professor in SIAT whose research interests span visualization and human-computer interaction. She has a background in user interfaces for control systems and a current interest in how this might translate to residents engaging with their personal living spaces that is motivated by her own experience in owning a solar-powered house. She is a co-director of the hviLab (humans, visualization and interfaces). Woodbury, the scientific director for the Canadian
Design Research Network, heads the advisory committee for Team North. SIAT faculty Ron Wakkary is also recognized for his valuable contributions.
The project's outcome will be viewed by more than 300,000 people at the
Solar Decathlon event and potentially by many more in its permanent
display location (the location is under negotiation). North House is an
exciting project to raise funds and opportunities for students. Team
North is negotiating with a major Canadian company for financial
support and student internships. Students active in the project will
experience a complex and highly visible design effort, gain experience
valuable to future employers and perhaps shape future careers in
sustainable design.
SIAT will integrate the project into a fourth-year interdisciplinary
course and is also proposing new undergraduate and graduate courses in
sustainable design.
The following are SIAT students involved in this project:
SIAT Graduate students:
Davis Marques
Karen Tanenbaum
Kevin Muise
Jason Boileau
Roham (Mehdi) Sheikholeslami
SIAT Undergraduate Students:
Simon Kwok
Jin Fan
Christine Poh
Project Status: In Progress
Start Date: January 1, 2008



