UPDATE -Team Ontario’s ECHO house completes trip to California intact!

Team Ontario - ECHO house onsite in California

UPDATE – Team Ontario in the US Department of Energy Solar Decathlon has reassembled Project ECHO and continues to work on a few things to get the house ready for next week’s competition.
They are working on installing the solar thermal collectors and heat dump in the next day so they can pressure test those before they get water on Sunday. Good luck team! The competition starts Thursday, Oct 3.

 

Original Story –

What began as a dream for several students and faculty at Ottawa’s Algonquin College and Carleton University, and Kingston’s Queen’s University, has culminated in a million dollar project to construct a net zero home that will compete on a global stage this fall.

ECHO, short for ECological HOme, was showcased today as part of an Open House and mock competition to ready the team for the 2013 US Department of Energy Solar Decathlon.

“Our mission was to create an ecological home that sets the standard for sustainable living and creates waves of change in the housing market,” says Karl Kadwell, Project Manager for Team Ontario. “We are proud to have built this net zero home as a standard for future generations, and we are eager to showcase it in the competition this fall.”

ECHO is a 940 square foot, $300,000 home with a master bedroom, one bathroom, a multipurpose room that can be used as an office or second bedroom, and a combined kitchen/living room/dining room. Designed to be ‘net zero’, the home will utilize various solar and energy efficient technologies to produce at least as much energy in a year as it will consume. Students began designing the building in the summer of 2011: brainstorming its architectural appearance, running simulations and performing structural analysis. Construction began in September 2012 at Algonquin College’s campus in Perth, Ontario, where the students were able to complete most of the main structure and conduct a test move. In May of 2013, it was relocated to Algonquin College’s Ottawa campus for completion.

“This home is the result of a multi-disciplinary effort that brought together the theoretical knowledge taught by universities with the applied, hands-on learning offered by colleges to create a home that is both environmentally and financially sustainable,” says Professor Richard Briginshaw, Algonquin College Green Architecture Coordinator and member of Team Ontario. “These students have put a tremendous amount of effort into this project and I know they will make their schools and their country very proud of them.”

Dr. Kent MacDonald, President and CEO of Algonquin College; Dr. Roseann O’Reilly Runte, President and Vice Chancellor of Carleton University; and Laeeque Daneshmend, Deputy Provost of Queen’s University were all in attendance for the Open House, and offered the students words of encouragement. Ontario’s Minister of Energy, the Honorable Bob Chiarelli, was also in attendance to offer his support and announce that the team will receive $80,000 in provincial support from the Smart Grid Fund.

“I want to congratulate Team Ontario for their hard work and wish them the best of luck at the Solar Decathlon. The ECHO home and the students behind it are a prime example of why Ontario is considered a global leader in renewable energy, conservation and smart grid technology,” says Ontario Minister of Energy Bob Chiarelli. “I am proud the Ontario government is a supporter of Team Ontario.”

The next steps for the students involve preparing the house for shipping. The home is designed in two separate modules to make it easy for shipping, and those will be loaded onto flatbed trucks that will likely depart on Saturday, August 24. This year’s US Department of Energy Solar Decathlon is set to begin Thursday, October 3rd, in Irvine, California, with the competition wrapping up on October the 13th.

 




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