This document describes the S-HOUSE, a passive solar building constructed using renewable resources like straw bales. The S-HOUSE combines passive solar design principles with sustainable materials to serve as an office, demonstration building, and information center. Key innovations include the straw bale wall construction, specially designed screws to attach materials to the straw bales, and a biomass heat storage stove. Long-term monitoring of the building will provide performance data on the renewable materials to support broader adoption of sustainable construction practices.
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Sb05
1. S-HOUSE
Sustainable Building
Demonstrated by a passiv
house made of renewable
resources
Robert Wimmer Dr., Hannes Hohensinner DI,
Manfred Drack Dr.
GrAT - Center for Appropriate
Technology at the Vienna University
of Technology
Wiedner Hauptstrasse 8-10
1040 Vienna, Austria
Phone: ++43 1 58801 49523
Fax: ++43 1 58801 49533
E-mail: contact@grat.at
Keywords: renewable resources, straw bale
building, passive solar houses
Summary
Sustainable construction can be defined as follows:
Not only the building concepts but also the compo-
nents and materials which are used have to meet
the present needs of the users without burdening
future generations with waste disposal problems or
prolonged use of an out-dated building design. Thus
sustainable architecture means: form follows ethics,
i.e. the design is the result of a careful consideration
of functions, materials and their life-cycle performance
including long term perspectives, present and future
human needs and social aspects. This is the basic
principle under which the S-HOUSE, a passive solar
house made of renewable resources, is constructed.
Passive solar house technology is already well known.
Building materials based on renewable resources are
present in some areas (e.g. wood). But the combi-
nation of both is quite unique. This combination is made
visible by the S-HOUSE, an office and demonstration
building at the Center for Appropriate Technology in
B?heimkirchen / Austria. After a care-ful planing phase
the building was put up in early 2005. In this paper the
process of the S-HOUSE building phase is described.
Details of the building are mentioned in addition to
important background information.
The challenge of the S-HOUSE-project consists in
combining the high energy standard of passive solar
house technology (less than 15 kWh/m?a) with the use
of renewable resources and herewith to benefit from
the advantages of both.
Introduction to the S-HOUSE
concept
On an operative level the principles of sustainable
building ask for consideration of four main issues. These
are: time, material, efficiency and appropriateness to
the given situation. Most of the buildings in Austria are
made for a very long utilization phase leading to lots of
old houses that are out of date and out of fashion.
The construction domain is among the economical
sectors with the largest material flows and has an
extremely high energy consumption for production and
transport of construction materials. Furthermore it has
to be dealt with quantitative and qualitative problems
of material flows which are responsible both for
ecological damage and rising costs for disposal.
This was already mentioned by Wimmer et al. at the
SB02 in Oslo, where results of preliminary studies
have shown that beneath an improved thermal
insulation mainly the amplified use of materials made
of renewable resources presents a promising solution
to these problems.
With the high performance of straw bale buildings
the ¡°factor 10¡± concept ¨C i.e. reducing the material,
energy and area consumption by a factor of 10 ¨C is
implemented in the building sector. Thereby the whole
consumption within the live cycle is considered. The
reduced energy consumption during the utilisation
phase is realised by the passive house technology.
Using renewable resources like straw in the construction
reduces the material and energy consumption during
the whole life cycle.
There are of course several functional units that can
not be made of bio-based materials, for instance
the electrical installation. These applications are
designed on a modular basis and can be dismantled
easily. The valuable materials can thus be reused
in other products and follow the technical material
cycle. After the phase of use the modular construction
elements made of renewable resources can still be
reintroduced to biological cycles. Thereby they do not
harm the environment with toxic substances and do not
contribute to the waste problem.
Key innovations
The combination of renewable building materials
with the concept of passive solar houses to the ends
of sustainable building asks for the development of
new techniques. Over all the S-HOUSE construction
includes 19 innovations that cover construction
details within the whole house from ground work over
windows, wall construction, to the roof. Some of the
key innovations are described in the following.
Construction detail straw
bale wall
The wall construction of the S-House consists of the
layers shown in the figure 3. Static forces are beard
by an inner wooden plate construction which also
functions as a vapor seal. The plates are joined
together and form a box. The straw bales are attached
to the plates by the use of cords for enhanced
thermal bridge free heat insulation. On the outside
the straw bales are plastered with clay to make the
ventilated facade less vulnerable. With the Treeplast
screws (especially developed for the S-House) the
counterlathing is mounted to the straw bales carrying
the wooden sheathing.
Construction detail
Treeplast screw
Building with straw bales encounters the problem of
how to fix various components or structural elements
to the wall. Straw bales show an inhomogeneous,
comparatively rough structure. Ordinary nails or
screws as used with other building materials are not
applicable. So far there is a lack of devices that can
cope with the specific requirements.
The shape of the 365 mm long screw was optimized
withabiomimetictoolfromClausMattheck.Thestresses
in the material have thus be reduced considerably and
further reduced the material consumption. As material
the lignin based biopolymer Arboform was used. It is
made of renewable resources and is biodegradable
but water proof.
2. Biomass heat storage stove
Another innovative detail is a new type of biomass
stove. This stove stores the heat in an medium with
high heat capacity. The modularly built stove ¨C usually
used as stand alone oven with radiative heat transfer
¨C was adapted to the requirements of passive solar
houses. The combustion air used for burning is taken
from the outside of the building, because the controlled
ventilation must not be disturbed by ovens.
In passive solar houses additional heat production is
needed only with exceptionally long and cold weather
condition. But there are a whole lot of requests from
people how want to live in a passive solar house
showing that a small stove with visible flame will raise
the comfort of living considerably. In such cases this
stove with a power of 2.5 to 4 kW is an ideal solution.
Balanced Technology
Dissemination of renew-
able resources in the
building sector
The exhibition on sustainable building of best practice
development, which is hosted in the S-HOUSE, is
open to the public and will contribute to a broad
dissemination. The high performance at considerably
low cost of bio-based materials will be demonstrated
herewith, and give another impulse to sustainable
building in Austria and world wide.
Renewable resources play an important role in the
shift of our economic system towards sustainable
development. Particularly in the building sector there is
a multitude of functional solutions based on renewable
resources on the one hand and a high dissemination
potential due to the enormous material flow on the
other hand.
Central aim of the exhibition in the S-HOUSE is the
dissemination by offering extensive information about
the manifold product range of building materials
based on renewable resources and their correct
implementation. The exhibition grants access to the
developed solutions to all participant groups and
interested private persons.
Conclusions
The realization of the S-HOUSE demonstration buil-
ding enables the creation of an information centre
for renewable resources which opens access to
sustainable technologies for a broad public and
displays long-term measuring in a realistic user
scenario. Modern architecture presents the variety
of possible applications of building materials based
on renewable resources and herewith promotes their
dissemination.
The internet based platform on renewable resources
on www.nawaro.com established by GrAT is already
in service and provides information about products
made of bio-based materials (mainly from the German
and Austrian markets). It is appreciated by companies
manufacturing products as well as by architects and
private people building their own sustainable house.
Together with the S-HOUSE this information platform
completes the picture of new solutions.
Introducing the new technology shown by the
demonstration building has a strong potential to
considerably minimise environmental damage world
wide. Thus international co-operations already exist
and are intensified even more.
The S-HOUSE was nominated by Austrian officials for
the Global 100 Eco-Tech Awards at the Expo 2005
in Aichi, Japan.
Long term monitoring
An important aspect for a successful dissemination
of new building materials are tests and long term
monitoring. Although there are straw bale houses in
use that are almost 100 years old not many scientific
monitoring programs have been accomplished so
far. Thus the long term behavior with respect to heat
transfer, humidity in the building material etc. is not
sufficiently documented yet. An extensive monitoring
concept provides realistic and exact data about the
used constructions which constitute a basis for further
optimization and dissemination of building materials
made of renewable resources.
In the wall sensors have been installed to measure
relevant parameters for building physics. The
parameters are divided in those with high dynamics
an those with rather static behavior. The CO2
-content
or humidity within the building can be considered
to show high dynamic when for instance a group of
visitors appears at the exhibition. Of lower dynamic or
even static behavior for instance the humidity within the
insulation material can be considered. Such data are
measured with longer time intervals.
Additionally to the straw bale construction four test
boxes are filled with other insulation materials. These
test boxes are also equipped with measuring sensors to
compare the different behavior and to receive reference
data. All the electronically measured parameter are
adequately prepared and online available via the
internet (www.s-house.at and www.nawaro.com).
Acknowledgement
The S-HOUSE project is funded by: EU Life Environment
Program, Building of Tomorrow - Federal Ministry
for Transport, Innovation and Technology (BMVIT),
Government of Lower Austria