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8

ZEB

annual report 2014

SUMMARY

In 2014 we completed the first demonstration

buildings together with our partners

Arild Gustavsen

Centre Director ZEB

|

Professor NTNU

2014 has been a year with many important

results for our Research Centre on Zero

Emission Buildings (ZEB). The first

demonstration buildings were completed; the

new residential building Multikomfort Larvik,

the renovated office building Powerhouse

Kjørbo, and the first dwellings at Skarpnes.

The demonstration projects show how new

and existing technologies can be combined

into making state-of-the-art zero emission

buildings. All projects have received a lot

of attention in the building community, both

in Norway and internationally. Multikomfort

Larvik is nominated for the Mies van der Rohe

Award 2015, The European Union Prize for

Contemporary Architecture, which is granted

every two years to acknowledge and reward

quality architectural production in Europe.

Snøhetta is the architect and Br. Dahl and

Optimera are the building owners.

We have studied barriers against high

environmental ambitions located on the side

of the building owner and how the additional

cost of an energy efficient building is framed

in the Norwegian public. The main barriers

against maintaining high environmental goals

in large building projects were identified

in internal goals that are not binding,

environmental product declarations (EPDs)

that are difficult to use, and transitional

periods in the planning and building process.

We found four dominant ways of framing

additional costs of energy efficient buildings: a

focus on innovation, on environmental costs,

on energy efficiency measures and on direct

profitability for the construction firm. These

frames influence profoundly how the numbers

that are presented as “additional cost” are

produced, presented and evaluated.

Optimizing the building envelope and its

components is one of the key factors in order

to reduce the energy demand of buildings.

One study investigates the potential of using

new and promising glazing technologies like

thin polymer and glass films to improve the

thermal performance, and another study

explores the solar properties of a double

glazing unit filled with a phase change

material (PCM). A third study deals with the

search for the optimal window-to-wall ratio

(WWR) in different climates for an office

building. The optimal WWR value was found