Climate Change Row House, Long Island
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Come see the real story of what drove the environmental design for this mid-block, reconstructed row house that caused a fair level of controversy.
The original structure, designed in the late 19th century, suffered from an unfortunate 1970’s “re-do” resulting in a prison-like façade that was structurally unstable. Add to that the newly enforced floodplain regulations (the house had to be raised), high water table and moisture conditions and jointly owned party-wall contention.
If that was not enough, the owners, taking into account that NYC buildings are responsible for 75% of total greenhouse gas emissions, desired to maximize energy conservation – thus following passive house standards. The measures (high R- value insulation, air barrier, high performance windows and doors and heat recovery) combined with urban agriculture features, storm water retention and solar hot water truly make this two-family house in NYC unique.
Floodplain
http://www.fema.gov/mitigationbp/brief.do?mitssId=9932
Environmental Features
http://www.bloomberg.com/slideshow/2014-08-13/just-a-house-that-uses-90-...
Passive House
http://www.greenbuildingadvisor.com/blogs/dept/green-building-news/almos...
Status: Built
Architect: Thomas Paino
Structural: Dunne & Markis Structural Engineers
Passive House Consultant: Zero Energy Design
Contractor: All Dimension
Location:
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- Brooklyn
- Bellmore
- Cold Spring
- High Falls
- Ramsey
- Brooklyn
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- Saugerties
- OaklandUnited States
- United States
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- BaltimoreUnited States
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- Netherlands
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- Atlanta, GA
- Amsterdam-ZeeburgNetherlands
- SarasotaUnited States
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- SarasotaUnited States
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- Amsterdam Oud-ZuidNetherlands
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Climate Change Row House, Long Island
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