[Greenbuilding] Advice on siting a home when the view is to the north

Concorde Group concordegp at aol.com
Sun Oct 23 10:04:59 CDT 2016


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> On Oct 23, 2016, at 10:30, Alan Abrams <alan at abramsdesignbuild.com> wrote:
> 
> first impressions here, but if it were my house, I'd forego the Trombe wall--a level of complexity and expense that might not reward you with savings, compared to say, some clerestory windows with tuned overhangs. And I wouldn't be afraid of north facing glazing, which will collect measurable gain from scatter radiation, and provide reasonable winter comfort if 3x glazed, with tuned coatings and inert gases.
> 
> this arrangement could have the corollary benefit of passive cross ventilation in summer, with low operable openings on the north side, and operable clerestories on the south. 
> 
> --aa
> 
> Alan Abrams, CPBD, AIBD
> Associate Designer Helicon Works Architects
> Certified Passive House Consultant PHIUS
> Certified Professional Building Designer, American Institute of Building Design 
> President, National Council of Building Designer Certification
> cell     202-437-8583
> alan at abramsdesignbuild.com
>                              
> 
> 
> 
>> On Sun, Oct 23, 2016 at 10:18 AM, Lynelle Hamilton <lynelle at lahamilton.com> wrote:
>> Hello All,
>> 
>> I've found very little on this.  I have a NW facing lot, where the NW is the only decent view (on water). The south overlooks the septic, a road and low, wet land. 
>> 
>> I want to maximize winter heat gain, minimize winter heat loss and minimize overheating in the summer. I don't want to minimize the NW water view, and do want to take advantage of the significant breeze that goes NW-SE in the summer. Given the lot, this is a challenge...
>> 
>> I am thinking pf building a sunroom on the NW side that would be separated by large doors from the rest of the area in the winter, as well as installing           a Trombe wall in the south face of the house, but have no idea if this is a good approach.
>> 
>> Has anyone had any experience with such a siting and if so, any advice? I've spoken with two local designers (south lake Simcoe area), but neither has any idea of sustainable deisign.
>> 
>> Many thanks!
>> 
>> Lynelle
>> 
>> 
>> 
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