Imagine there’s no heat bill... it’s easy if you try.
D
uring a late December cold front, Dr. Stephen Holland and Vivian Baguer Holland were enjoying some time at their waterfront home on Lake Tashmoo. The thermostat read 12 degrees outside but it felt like 5. Inside was a comfortable 69 degrees, despite there being no roaring wood stove, clanking radiators, or baseboard heat. The Hollands don’t have a traditional heating system at all. Their two-story, approximately 2,500-square-foot home is certified passive by the Passive House Academy (one of two relevant certifying agencies in the United States), meaning it requires almost no energy to heat or cool its four bedrooms and three-and-a-half baths. When I visited the house a few weeks earlier, wind ripped over the white-capped pond as workers from Contemporary Landscapes fought a hard-won battle against fallen leaves. But for all the clamor and chaos outside, inside there was silence. It was both unsettling and exhilarating to stand in that snug living room and watch the world spin madly on but neither feel nor hear the effects of any of it. “Like being in a cocoon,” said Vivian. A passive house is built so efficiently that it requires extremely little energy for heating or cooling. With an energy recovery ventilation system, insulation, and no air or thermal leaks – “thermal bridges” – a house can theoretically be heated entirely from the sun, body heat, and excess heat from appliances, including a television set. Cooling a passive home depends on strategic window placement and, in some settings, the use of a brise-soleil, an architectural structure that deflects sunlight. To be a certified passive house, the building must meet a rigorous standard of energy efficiency. Though the certification is intense, it can be broken down to three main tenets: proper insulation, air-tightness, and no thermal bridges. The passive house metric was developed and refined in the late 1980s by Dr. Wolfgang Feist, a German physicist, and Dr. Bo Adamson, a Swedish scientist. The first passive-house residence was built in Darmstadt, Germany, in 1991. The first passive house in the United States was built in Urbana, Illinois, in 2003. Located about a mile outside of downtown Vineyard Haven on the eastern shore of Lake Tashmoo, it was designed by Hutker Architects and built by Farley Pedler of Farley Built Inc. The view from the lot is stunning and its proximity to the water enviable, but its size and shape posed some design challenges. The lot is roughly sixty-
58 home & garden • spring–summer 2018
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THE PASSION FOR PASSIVE photo graphs b y d av id wel c h
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