Registration is open for the JLC LIVE conference at the
Rhode Island Convention Center in Providence, Rhode Island,
March 23-26. One of the events already drawing a lot of advance
interest, according to show organizer Sherry Daniels, is a
panel discussion about deep energy retrofits moderated by
JLC editor Don Jackson.
On the panel are four New England builder/remodelers with
some leading-edge high-performance projects in their
portfolios:
Paul Eldrenkamp, owner of
Byggmeister, a
Boston-area building and remodeling firm. Byggmeister makes
deep energy retrofits a core mission. A recent remodel in
Belmont, Mass., cut an older home s energy use by two thirds
even while doubling the home s square footage from 2,700 to
5,400. Peak heating load in the structure dropped from 36
Btu/sqft/hr to just 5 (see
summary report). Byggmeister s winter newsletter features
an interview about the project with construction manager Cador
Pricejones (
Tale of a Deep-Energy Retrofit page 4). For more
background, here s a Journal of Light Construction article by
Eldrenkamp about measuring and comparing home energy
performance (
A Simple Approach to Home Energy Rating by Paul Eldrenkamp;
JLC 2/10).
Paul
Huijing, owner of Paul Huijing, Inc. Construction
Engineering, in Wilbraham, Mass. Huijing s feature artlcle
Building an Energy-Efficient Spec House ran in the Journal
of Light Construction in August, 2007.
David Joyce, President of
Synergy
Companies Construction, LLC, in Arlington, Mass. A
brief case study chronicles Synergy s recent retrofit
project on a 3600-square-foot foursquare home in Concord, Mass.
Building Science Corporation, who consulted on the job, also
produced a
case report. And the Massachusetts Department of Energy
Resources produced a
flier on the retrofit of the Arlington, Mass., two-family
home of Alex Cheimets, carried out in 2008 (Cheimets has since
become VP of Sales and Marketing for Synergy Companies).
Sean Jeffords, owner of
Beyond Green
Construction in Easthampton, Mass. Beyond Green made the
news in Western Massachusetts recently with a
green
makeover of a local brew pub and restaurant, the
Northampton Brewery. On the drawing board is Beyond Green s
Off the Grid Condos project.
Zero-energy retrofits typically have large up-front costs
and long payback periods even if fuel prices are assumed to be
headed upwards. Nevertheless, Massachusetts has made deep
energy retrofits of existing buildings a key element of
achieving a zero-energy housing stock in the state. In 2009, a
task force appointed by the governor included building
retrofits in the report
Getting to Zero. Paul Eldrenkamp, who chaired the
residential team for the task force, said at the time, It would
be irresponsible not to. Commented Eldrenkamp recently: Deep
energy retrofits are crazy. But continuing to build
underperforming houses is even crazier. And besides, a lot of
the bathrooms and kitchens we do are crazy, too.