新澳门六合彩开奖结果2023

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Passive House 新澳门六合彩开奖结果2023 2024 Annual Conference revels in growing self-confidence

John Bleasby
Passive House 新澳门六合彩开奖结果2023 2024 Annual Conference revels in growing self-confidence
PASSIVE HOUSE CANADA - Passive House 新澳门六合彩开奖结果2023 CEO Chris Ballard at the 2024 conference opening.

鈥淣othing happens until it all happens at once. And I鈥檓 waiting for it to all happen at once. I know we鈥檙e on the cusp of it.鈥

This high level of enthusiasm was expressed by (PHC) CEO Chris Ballard during his opening address at last week鈥檚 6th Annual Passive House 新澳门六合彩开奖结果2023 Conference at the University of Victoria.

In addition to returning to its West Coast roots, PHC held its meetings in Passivhaus-certified buildings for the first time, an important landmark for the organization.

Ballard also pointed out that over his four years as CEO, membership has grown five-fold to over 2,000. Newsletter subscriptions have increased to 14,000. PassivHaus-certified or 鈥減assive adjacent鈥 buildings now number 10,000 across the country.

However, Ballard expects more from Passive House 新澳门六合彩开奖结果2023. His confidence stems from what he observes as the changing attitudes of key players who now recognize Passive House 新澳门六合彩开奖结果2023 as an important force in the drive towards improved energy-efficiency and occupancy comfort.

Ballard said policy-makers, financiers and business people want to know how to build on mass to the Passivhaus standard, how to create the appropriate building legislation that promotes the building of Passivehaus, or passive adjacent, and how to finance these buildings.

鈥淭he conversation has shifted from, 鈥榃hat is Passive House?鈥 to 鈥楬ow do we do more of it? How do we do it faster? And how do we do it cost-effectively?鈥欌 he said.

Ahead of the three days of learning sessions and panel discussions, the 500 in-person and virtual attendees were treated to a keynote address from Bill Reed, a founding board member of the U.S. Green Building Council and a principal of . The organization鈥檚 work centres on the creation and management of integrative whole and living system design processes known as 鈥淩egenerative Development.鈥

Reed challenged his audience to think beyond designs that seek to achieve improved building efficiencies. That鈥檚 only one piece in the overall environmental puzzle, he said.

鈥淭here鈥檚 more to be done. How do we use the architecture of buildings as acupuncture points to begin to heal the world, not just limit the damage? We live in an interconnected, dynamic, complex and evolving system. We cannot save the Earth by solving fragmented problems.鈥

Such big picture thinking was a point of departure for attendees.

鈥淚t was really refreshing,鈥 Chris Hill, principal with Vancouver modular home builder , told the Daily Commercial News. 鈥淚t was really good, different. I was surprised, quite frankly.鈥

Hill said Reed鈥檚 address and the panel session Reed hosted later that day were the main topics of conversation among attendees at dinner that evening.

In addition to Reed鈥檚 thought-provoking outlook, other new topics were brought forward.

For example, presentations addressed the growing importance of embodied carbon and its convergence with Passivhaus standards.

Discussions concerning increased potential for Passivehaus-certified structures among private sector investors also expanded the conference鈥檚 overall perspective.

Brett Sagert, ESG and sustainability specialist for Vancouver property developer and builder , told the Daily Commercial News the presentation by Joseph Ogilvie of opened his eyes to new ideas. Ogilvie outlined innovative sources for capital investment, and the ROI potential for converting underutilized Class B and C office buildings into affordable housing.

鈥淚鈥檝e come away from the conference with a new light on how to bring up this conversation with some of our development team and our company president,鈥 he said.

Many of the other 30 educational sessions concerned the latest thoughts on Passive House design and construction matters. Topics included high-level presentations on climate and catastrophic resiliency, building envelopes, low-energy mechanical systems, the integration of mass timber construction into Passivehaus designs and overall quality of life issues related to efficient building design.

The conference closed with an award ceremony recognizing component manufacturers and individual projects that had recently achieved Passivhaus certification. This was punctuated by the 2024 , which was presented jointly to the University of Victoria and Mike Wilson, its director of campus planning and sustainability.

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