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EDSGN 100 Design Project #1, Team 3 Christopher Cavanaugh, Ivana Matijevic, Nicholas Petrizzo, Andrew Channel.

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Presentation on theme: "EDSGN 100 Design Project #1, Team 3 Christopher Cavanaugh, Ivana Matijevic, Nicholas Petrizzo, Andrew Channel."— Presentation transcript:

1 EDSGN 100 Design Project #1, Team 3 Christopher Cavanaugh, Ivana Matijevic, Nicholas Petrizzo, Andrew Channel

2 Exploring Our Community... Neighborhood-wide Attributes Home Attributes Rationale

3 Project Goals Comfort Affordability Environmentally Attractive Tasteful Aesthetic Appeal

4 Neighborhood at a Glance 30 Single-Family Homes Approx..5 acres per lot -- Drainage Retention Pond, Produce Garden Integrated waste treatment, irrigation, fertilizer system Reclaimed/recycled asphalt (FHA- approved), two-lane roads

5 Neighborhood Plan Retention Pond Produce Garden

6 Excess Water Drainage Spacing of Homes with.5-acre lots Vegetation: Willows, Eastern Red Cedar Trees, etc. Retention Pond Irrigate Community Produce Garden Source for ancillary home use (i.e. hoses, etc.)

7 Reusing Waste Waste treatment plant adjacent to retention pond Plant separates liquid, solid waste Treated liquid ⇒ Other garden irrigation source Treated solids used as fertilizer

8 Unique Produce Garden Model Residents assessed small fee ⇒ Free Produce Maintain garden/Pay for greenhouse Small number of employees Seeds

9 Garden Becomes Business Produce garden open to public for sale Turn Profit ⇒ Resident Fees Decline Less financial burden for residents

10 Advantages of Garden Full re-use of waste water and run-off Fresh produce nearby No fluctuating produce prices for residents Average family consumes 360 servings fruit/veg. per month ⇒ one flat rate

11 Community Power Electrical Power Sourcing: 2-fold Geothermal Energy: powers HVAC (approx. 46% of typical electric bill) Solar: powers rest of house (remaining 54% of typical electric bill) System on grid: piece of mind, surplus sale to grid, fund maintenance

12 Typical Sustainable Home Attractive to Middle Class Family of Four

13 House Specifications Approx. 2,000 sq. ft. 3 Bedrooms, 3 Bathrooms 2 Stories

14 Ground Floor Layout Text Front

15 Second-Floor Layout Front

16 Sustainable Design Attributes Energy-Star, environmentally friendly materials used wherever possible in homes Design emphasis: large windows (especially West-facing) ⇒ less artificial light

17 Powering the Home Average PA Home: 861 kWh/month Projection: 800 kWh/month Reason: Slightly smaller sq. footage, less need for artificial lighting

18 Roof Solar Units Expectation: Solar power provides up to 60% of electricity if necessary 240-watt panels (5ft. x 3ft.) ⇒ 25 panels per South-facing roof

19 Geothermal Intent: Power every HVAC system (projected: 46% of monthly electric power) Expectation: supply up to 50% of community power + surplus Surplus resold to grid

20 Typical Home Furnace Size Given: 2,000 sq. ft., R-19, R-30 and R- 11 insulation; tight-fitting storm windows or double pane windows Minimum Load: 58,000 btus Maximum Load: 70,000 btus

21 Solar-Geothermal Duality Advantages Solar power: greatest value per dollar Projection: Break even approx. 3.5 yrs. Geothermal: easily accessible, reliable Materials for equipment: most eco- friendly

22 Compared To... Wind Power: unappealing appearance, high maintaince Hydroelectric Power: bad value for location

23 Home Water System Connected to Public Water Supply Average American Home: 400 gallons/day Projection: 275-325 gallons/day Rationale: Factors lessen water demand Recycled water for outdoor uses Low-flow technology for some appliances (i.e. toilets)

24 Cost-Benefit Analysis Average Monthly PA Electric Bill: $97.75 Sustainable Community Projection: $0 Additional income to homeowner from surplus power sale to grid

25 Cost-Benefit Analysis Water Usage: up to 31% savings Affordable, predictable fruit/vegetable costs ⇒ savings on family groceries Tax Breaks (varying) for eco-friendly aspects of each property: direct savings for homeowner

26 Summary Tasteful, affordable homes with lower water bill, without electric bill, sustainable waste system Feasible, economical, “green” electric power Unique garden co-op model lowers grocery bills, attracts homebuyers Potential tax breaks for buyer and builder

27 References Solar Power Calculator. N.p., n.d. Web. 01 Mar. 2013..http://www.findsolar.com/index.php?page=rightforme "Sizing Calculator." For Furnaces, Air Conditioners, Heat Pumps and Boilers. N.p., n.d. Web. 01 Mar. 2013..http://www.furnacecompare.com/perl/estimate_heat_loss.pl "Electrical Energy Cost Calculator." Electrical Energy Cost Calculator. N.p., n.d. Web. 01 Mar. 2013..http://www.csgnetwork.com/elecenergycalcs.html "ESR - Table 5. Average Monthly Bill by Census Division, and State, 2008." U.S. Energy Information Administration. N.p., n.d. Web. 01 Mar. 2013..http://www.eia.gov/cneaf/electricity/esr/table5.html "Where Does My Money Go? : ENERGY STAR." Energy Star. N.p., n.d. Web. 01 Mar. 2013..http://www.energystar.gov/index.cfm?c=products.pr_pie "US Indoor Water Use." EPA. Environmental Protection Agency, n.d. Web. 01 Mar. 2013..http://www.epa.gov/WaterSense/pubs/indoor.html "Vegetables and Fruits: Get Plenty Everyday." Harvard School of Public Health. Harvard University, n.d. Web. 01 Mar. 2013..http://www.hsph.harvard.edu/nutritionsource/vegetables-full-story/

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