May
14, 2006 —The challenge of combining ecological technologies
with the need for affordable housing in the hurricane-ravaged
Gulf Coast occupied the minds and talents of 18 University
of Virginia students taking part in a unique student/faculty
project.
The interdisciplinary team of undergraduate and graduate
students in the School of Architecture and the School of
Engineering and Applied Science teamed up throughout the
spring semester to create a Habitat for Humanity home to
be constructed in Gautier, Miss. Along the way, they tackled
issues related to high winds, humidity, moisture and hurricanes,
and employed passive solar technologies to build preHAB,
a prototype environmentally responsive panelized house kit
— the second house in ecoMOD, a multi-year research
and design / build / evaluate project at the School of Architecture.
"The opportunity to expand the ecoMOD project to include
a house for a family displaced by Katrina has helped my
students and me clarify our design priorities. With such
strict financial and technical constraints, we have been
forced to make difficult choices. Yet constraints can be
a very productive framework for a design project,”
said assistant professor of architecture John Quale, who
serves as project director and created the preliminary design
to give the one-semester project a kick start.
An overarching question they faced was how to achieve a
beautiful solution with inexpensive materials through design
and ecological strategies that will also produce quality,
said graduate student Amy Lewandowski, the project manager
for the endeavor. “What are we doing if we cannot
design for everyone?”
The design team incorporated cross ventilation and solutions
that capture natural sunlight while protecting from solar
gain, and expanded the livable space by including multi-use
swing spaces that blur the definition of outside and inside.
They maximized interior spaces by designing built-in cabinetry
and closets in interior walls and using high ceilings to
give a sense of spaciousness.
Decisions about the materials used were also critical to
the overall ecological plan. Steel and foam panels for the
exterior walls and roof provide a thermal barrier that reduces
heating and cooling needs while also protecting against
mildew, a condition that plagues houses susceptible to flooding
and high humidity.
“The Katrina disaster opened up a whole new realm
of possibilities to rethink the ethics of building,”
said fourth-year student Ginger Koons. “It’s
an opportunity to start on a whole new level with what we
know about smart building and new ways of building and construction
techniques.”
The project is a hands-on experience for all involved.
For weeks the students worked in a hangar at the University’s
decommissioned Milton Airport, building interior walls and
cabinetry, and modifying exterior wall panels.
“I love the idea of taking something off the page
or off the computer and building it,” said fourth-year
student Ginny Wambaugh, who praised the hands-on aspect
of the experience. It was an important lesson in the practical
side and the consequences of the decisions you make as a
designer, she said. “How do you order materials? It’s
not enough to know that there is siding. You have to know
how much.”
The practical side was an eye opener for the engineering
students as well.
“It forces them to address a project from a more
holistic approach and consider cost, the particular location
and conditions. It puts their technical work into context,”
said engineering professor Paxton Marshall, who is coordinating
the work of the engineering students.
“Engineering education is very science-based. You
learn general principles but do not often get to apply them
in real world projects.”
Fourth-year mechanical engineer Brian Hickey praised the
experience. “To take ownership of the project makes
it more rewarding and makes you more passionate about it,”
he said.
The house will be fitted with a scavenger system to reclaim
heat from the heat pump to make hot water. A photovoltaic
(solar panel) array, obtained through a grant from Solar
Light for Africa, which the engineers needed to adapt for
operation on 120-volt electricity, will supply “most
of the regular energy needs for most of the time,”
said Benjamin Kidd, a graduate mechanical engineering student.
In considering the angle for the photovoltaics that would
produce optimum power, a decision was made early in the
design process to mount the eight panels flush with the
roof so they won’t be blown away in high winds, Hickey
said. The decision was a compromise between optimum gain
and wind protection.
Fourth-year engineering student Michael Pilat learned the
need to gather information specific to the project on a
trip to Mississippi to visit the site. Seeing first-hand
“the presence of trees and where they are located
helped us in our decision-making process,” he said.
The students learned that the realities of decision-making
in a real-life situation often involve compromise, just
as they saw that working in multi-disciplinary teams can
create an atmosphere of collaboration and cross-pollination.
“As engineers working with architects we learn to
be more free-flowing and artistic in our design and the
architects, hopefully, learn to be more analytical,”
Kidd said.
Architecture graduate student Tommy Solomon, the construction
administrator for the project, agrees with the value of
learning to share ideas with others. Throughout the process
they had to question every aspect of the design, he said.
“How do you build it? How do you make the parts? How
does it all go together?” For him, the greatest lessons
he learned from the experience are: “Ask why. Ask
how.”
Many of the students will travel to Mississippi to help
assemble the house. They will work hand-in-hand with Habitat
for Humanity workers on the construction and refine the
booklet they are creating, a how-to primer for creating
the house.
“The project is almost like a kit-in-parts that Habitat
could use in the future,” said Soloman. “The
whole process needs to be user-friendly.”
“I believe we've come up with a strategy that will
not only efficiently and comfortably house a family in need,
but demonstrate to Habitat for Humanity the potential of
sustainably designed prefabrication," Quale said.