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Real-Time Adaptive Systems for Building EnvelopesDeo, Vishwadeep 15 November 2007 (has links)
The thesis attempts to investigate the issues pertaining to design, fabrication and
application of real-time adaptive systems for building envelopes, and to answer
questions raised by the idea of motion in architecture. The thesis uses the Solar
Decathlon Competition as a platform to base all the research and consequently to verify
their applications.
Photo-voltaic (PV) panels and shading devices are two different components of
Georgia Institute of Technology s the Solar Decathlon House, located above the roof,
that are based on the concept of Homeostasis or self-regulated optimization. For the
PV panels, the objective is to optimize energy production, by controlling their movement
to track the changing position of Sun, whereas, the objective for the shading devices is
to reduce heating or cooling loads by controlling the position of shading devices, thus
controlling direct and diffused heat gains through the roof.
To achieve this adaptive feature, it required three layers of operations. First was
the design of the mechanics of movement, which tried to achieve the required motion for
the PV panels and shading devices by using minimum components and parameters.
Second was the design of the individual parts that are consistent with the overall concept
of the House. And finally, the third layer is the design of controls that automates the
motion of the PV panels and Shading Devices, using a set of sensors that actuate the
attached motors. As a final product, there is an attempt to integrate the precision and
material efficiency of digital fabrication with the self-regulated optimization of the roof
components.
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The North House as Component Based ArchitectureDoesburg, Chloe 17 February 2010 (has links)
The North House is a proof-of-concept prefabricated solar powered home designed for northern climates, and intended for the research and promotion of high-performance sustainable architecture. Led by faculty at the University of Waterloo, the development and design of the project involved a broad collaboration between faculty and students at the University of Waterloo, with Ryerson University and Simon Fraser University. The North House prototype competed in the U.S. Department of Energy’s Solar Decathlon in October of 2009. This thesis identifies the North House as a component-based building. It illustrates in detail the components of which the house is composed, the sequence by which they are assembled, and the details that allow for the building’s rapid assembly and disassembly. Finally, the thesis explores the possibilities afforded by componentbased architecture including adaptability, off-site fabrication and demountability. Drawing on this, the thesis projects future ways of designing buildings sustainable to both manufacture and operate.
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The North House as Component Based ArchitectureDoesburg, Chloe 17 February 2010 (has links)
The North House is a proof-of-concept prefabricated solar powered home designed for northern climates, and intended for the research and promotion of high-performance sustainable architecture. Led by faculty at the University of Waterloo, the development and design of the project involved a broad collaboration between faculty and students at the University of Waterloo, with Ryerson University and Simon Fraser University. The North House prototype competed in the U.S. Department of Energy’s Solar Decathlon in October of 2009. This thesis identifies the North House as a component-based building. It illustrates in detail the components of which the house is composed, the sequence by which they are assembled, and the details that allow for the building’s rapid assembly and disassembly. Finally, the thesis explores the possibilities afforded by componentbased architecture including adaptability, off-site fabrication and demountability. Drawing on this, the thesis projects future ways of designing buildings sustainable to both manufacture and operate.
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