It’s Christmas week in the Maine woods, and Chris
Corson’s Passive House project is starting to wrap up. The
cedar clapboards and cypress trim on the home’s exterior are
complete, and sheetrockers are working inside. “We are just
finishing the install of the kitchen cabinets, and we’re
about to start the finished floor upstairs, and doors and
trim,” Corson reported on Tuesday morning. “We have
everything commissioned, and are balancing the ERV
tomorrow.”
A drywall contractor applies joint compound (top). Even with
heating and ventilation systems turned off, the house has been able
to maintain a comfortable temperature and humidity
(bottom).
With winter here to apply a real test for the concept, Corson is
already jubilant about the building’s energy performance. The
home’s heating system — a 12,000-BTU Mitusbishi Mr.
Slim mini-split heat pump (model MUZ-FE12NA) — was hooked up
a few weeks ago. In a conventional house, the heat pump would be
sized to heat or cool one room; but in Corson’s
super-insulated design, the heat pump is the whole building’s
only heat (the house also has a few feet of electric baseboard as
an emergency backup in case the heat pump breaks). The heat pump is
rated at 22 SEER as an air conditioner; as heat, the unit has a
coefficient of performance (COP) above 4 at 47°F. It maintains
92 percent of its rated capacity even at 17°F, and will heat
the house until outdoor temperatures hit 13 degrees below zero.
Last week, with outdoor temps in the twenties, Corson measured
supply air temperatures at the heating registers at 105°F.
Last week, Corson hosted a tour and meeting of his Maine Passive
House group, including architects, builders, and energy experts
from around the state. “Over and over again, different people
would ask the same question,” he says: “Is the ERV
running? Is the heat pump running? They’re so quiet, you
can’t tell. You have to hold your hand right in front of the
diffusers to feel the heat coming out, and if you want to know if
the ERV is operating, you have to go into the mechanical room and
put your hand against it, and you can barely feel it
vibrating.”
Best of all, however, is the envelope insulation performance
— which, combined with a moderate amount of high-performance
glazing on the east, south, and west sides of the home, makes the
heating system almost an afterthought. “Last week, it was
25°F outside, and we turned the heat off,” says Corson.
“We were working in T-shirts. It was 66°F inside. And two
days later, the temperature inside had dropped to 64°F. Two
degrees of temperature drop in two days — with no
heat.”
The home’s west wall showing the mini-split heat pump
elevated on a mounting bracket (top); the south wall with glazing
(middle), and the east wall with the entry door. The white vent at
right is the air intake for the energy recovery ventilator
(bottom).
Once the new homeowners move in, Corson hopes to monitor the
building’s energy performance for several years. “I
know my first year will be the worst, because it will take some
energy just to dry the building materials out — the drywall,
the concrete, and so forth,” he explains. “I’m
expecting the house to actually perform better and better as time
goes on. But I want to measure it to be sure.”
Meanwhile, Corson is already thinking ahead to his next Passive
House project. “I have two projects on the drawing
board,” he says, “and I already know there are a few
things I’d like to do differently next time. People tell me
that you have to build at least three Passive House buildings
before you get your head wrapped around the idea. I figure by the
time I finish my third one, I’ll really understand what
I’m doing.”