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Home / Whanganui Chronicle / Lifestyle

Solar planning makes mission possible

By Eco-thrifty renovation with Nelson Lebo
Whanganui Chronicle·
1 May, 2012 10:07 PM4 mins to read

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Last week I wrote about 'payback period' and 'low hanging fruit'.

To review, payback period is the amount of time it takes to recoup an investment in energy-efficiency with savings on your power bill. Low hanging fruit are simply those investments that have the shortest payback period, or the easiest to reach.

While a high performance eco-thrifty home will utilise many cheap and easy strategies for energy savings, the overall design strategy must be holistic and the design itself must be thorough.

The success of turning our decrepit villa (recalled by a visitor as "The coldest house in New Zealand") into a warm, dry, low-energy home came through our dual approach of 'big picture' design and attention-to-detail.

Regarding last week's column, many readers may have been asking themselves a number of questions, one of which was probably, "Why did those crazy Americans buy the worst house in Wanganui?"

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Fair enough. There are a number of answers to that.

First, it was the cheapest listed house in Wanganui at the time. (But that was just a happy coincidence.)

Second, it is two blocks from the beach, and I like to walk to the surf. An equivalent house in Raglan, where we lived for 2 years before coming here, would have been 500 per cent to 800 per cent more expensive.

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Third, it has good solar gain to the north. We looked at 30 houses in 2 days and only 5 of them had any real potential for free heating from the sun.

Fourth, and this is part of what separated it from the other 4 that had good solar potential, is that the lean-to part of the villa (the north corner and northwestern side) had already been gutted. With a little vision, we could picture how this section could function as a solar furnace for the rest of the villa.

What that would take is called passive solar design.

Passive implies something just sitting there, like a parked car. But park that car in a sunny lot and you get passive solar.

Design implies whether something is intentional or not.

While there are often no alternatives to parking in the sun, there are many alternatives when deciding where to put windows in a building.

Putting lots of windows on the sunny side (north for us 'down under'), few or no windows on the shady side (south), and a couple on the east and west is good passive solar design.

It allows free energy to enter directly into the building but does not allow much energy to escape through windows that don't get much direct sunlight.

During our renovation, we added glazing (windows and French doors) to the northeast and northwest sides, and removed windows from the southeast and southwest sides.

A window is simply a hole in the side of your home with a piece of glass (two if you're lucky) in it. Windows can gain heat energy or lose it.

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Because winter is the time of year that we're mostly concerned about this, I'll put it as straightforward as possible.

In winter, northerly facing windows are net energy gainers and southerly facing windows are net energy losers.

Summer is a different story, and there is such a thing as too much incoming solar heating even in winter, just ask the hippies from the 1970s who had good intentions but incomplete design ideas.

I'll address these issues next week.

Nelson Lebo is co-founder of the ECO School with his wife, Dani. theecoschool@gmail.com - 022 635 0868 - 06 344 5016. They have extensively renovated an old villa at Castlecliff with green principles and sustainability in mind.

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