Message
  • You need an active subscription in order to view this content.

    To subscribe to Passive House Plus for as little as €15 please click here.

Lenny Antonelli

Lenny Antonelli is deputy editor of Passive House Plus. He also writes regularly for the Irish Times, and has contributed to a variety of other publications including the Sunday Times, the CS Monitor, Village, the Sunday Tribune amd the Dubliner. He is currently working on a radio documentary on Ireland's oceans. 

The humble electric immersion could play a key role in fighting climate change, according to Dr Mark Barrett, a rearcher at the Energy Institute at University College London.

According to the Guardian

Dr Barrett says the heaters could be switched on and off rapidly to compensate for the erratic output of wind turbines and solar panels, each heater controlled by a gadget that responds to signals sent through the electricity grid – a system used since the second world war. "Everybody is always looking for a shiny new silver-bullet solution" says Dr Barrett, "but this idea is cheap, safe, and based on technology that's been around for decades"....

...Dr Barrett explains that 19m domestic tanks, each fitted with a standard 3kW (kilowatt) immersion heater, would provide over 55GW of potentially flexible demand, which could be adjusted to suit the output of renewable generators. The immersion controller would ensure the water temperature stays above a set minimum – so the house would never be without a hot shower – but within a range of 45C-65C the grid would be in control. Along with hot-water storage in commercial buildings, this would provide balancing capacity greater than peak consumption today, and is a key feature of the computer model Dr Barrett has devised to investigate how Britain could best achieve a high proportion of renewable power.

Contractors Graham has received an award from Action Renewables for the most sustainable building project in Northern Ireland. The company's flagship offices in Hillsborough, Co Down boasts wood pellet heating, rainwater harvesting, low carbon concrete, passive solar design and natural ventilation strategies.
Wednesday, 17 June 2009 00:00

Interactive 'green your home' guide

  Check out the Guardian's interactive guide to greening your home

In an interesting Treehugger slideshow on green roofs, a valid question is raised: while green roofs might have many environmental and economic advantages, do they also encourage bad planning by allowing buildings to be constructed in places they normally wouldn't be allowed?
Thursday, 11 June 2009 00:00

High rise for wildlife?

Leeds based architects Garnett Netherwood have won an international competition to construct 12-meter high "wildlife towers" along the Leeds and Liverpool canal. The towers will be constructed from parts of demolished buildings.

Thursday, 11 June 2009 00:00

What is a carbon neutral building?

Writing on TreeHugger, Lloyd Alter takes a look at two supposedly carbon neutral buildings. The first is the Satander building in Milan, which architects Mario Cucinella have billed as "first zero CO2 office building in Milan."

Speaking in London yesterday, US energy secretary Steven Chu said that painting roofs and pavements white could help to mitigate global warming by reflecting sunlight back into space.

Friday, 05 June 2009 11:47

The €100,000 sustainable home?

Mario Cucinella architects have produced an interesting theoretical prototype for a low cost sustainable home, dubbed 'Casa 100k'.

The Irish Times reports on changes to plans for the Battersea Power station in London, which is to be redeveloped by the Treasury Holdings led-company Real Estate Opportunities.
Friday, 29 May 2009 00:00

Sustainable urban design in Brazil

curitibabusstop.jpg
A sheltered, disability-friendy bus stop in Curitiba 

A new film from DelBello Pictures and MariaVazPhotgography profiles the Brazilian town of Curitiba, one of the most interesting examples of sustainable urban design going.

Page 40 of 47