List of pioneering solar buildings
The following buildings are of significance in pioneering the use of solar powered building design:
- MIT Solar House #1, Massachusetts, United States (Hoyt C. Hottel & others, 1939)[1][2][3]
- Howard Sloan House, Glenview, Illinois, United States (George Fred Keck, 1940)[1][4]
- "Solar Hemicycle", near Madison, Wisconsin, United States (Frank Lloyd Wright, 1944)[1][5]
- Löf House, Boulder, Colorado, United States (George Löf, 1945)[1][2][6]
- Rosenberg House, Tucson, Arizona, United States (Arthur T. Brown, 1946)[1][7]
- MIT Solar House #2, United States, (Hoyt C. Hottel & others, 1947)[1][8]
- Peabody House ("Dover Sun House", MIT Solar House #6), Dover, Massachusetts, United States (Eleanor Raymond & Mária Telkes, 1948)[1][2][8]
- Henry P. Glass House, Northfield, Illinois, United States (Henry P. Glass, 1948)[9][10]
- Rose Elementary School, Tucson, Arizona, United States (Arthur T. Brown, 1948)[1][7]
- MIT Solar House #3, United States, (Hoyt C. Hottel & others, 1949)[1][2][8]
- New Mexico State College House, New Mexico, United States (Lawrence Gardenhire, 1953)[8]
- Lefever Solar House, Pennsylvania, United States (HR Lefever, 1954)[8]
- Bliss House, Amado, Arizona, United States (Raymond W. Bliss & M. K. Donavan, 1954)[1][8]
- Solar Building, Albuquerque, New Mexico, United States (Frank Bridgers & Don Paxton, 1956)[1][11]
- University of Toronto House, Toronto, Ontario, Canada (EA Allcut, 1956)[8]
- Solar House, Tokyo, Japan (Masanosuke Yanagimachi, 1956)[1][8]
- Solar House, Bristol, United Kingdom (L Gardner, 1956)[8]
- Curtis House, Rickmansworth, United Kingdom (Edward JW Curtis, 1956)[12]
- Löf House, Denver, Colorado, United States (James M. Hunter & George Löf, 1957)[1][13]
- AFASE "Living With the Sun" House, Phoenix, Arizona, United States (Peter Lee, Robert L. Bliss & John Yellott, 1958)[1]
- MIT Solar House #4, United States (Hoyt C. Hottel & others, 1958)[1][2][8]
- Solar House, Casablanca, Morocco (CM Shaw & Associates, 1958)[1][8]
- Solar House, Nagoya, Japan (Masanosuke Yanagimachi, 1958)[1][8]
- Curtiss-Wright "Sun Court," Princeton, New Jersey, United States (Maria Telkes & Aladar Olgyay, 1958)[1]
- "Sun-Tempered House" Van Dresser Residence (Peter van Dresser, 1958)
- Thomason Solar House "Solaris" #1, Washington D.C., United States (Harry Thomason, 1959)[1][14]
- Passive Solar House, Odeillo, France (Félix Trombe & Jacques Michel, 1967)[1][15]
- Steve Baer House, Corrales, New Mexico, United States (Steve Baer, 1971)[1][16][17]
- Skytherm House, Atascadero, California, United States (Harold R. Hay, 1973)[1][18][19]
- Solar One, Newark, Delaware, United States (K.W. Böer & Maria Telkes, 1973)[1]
- MIT Solar Building V, Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States (T.E. Johnson, C.C. Benton, S. Hale, 1978)[20][21]
- "Unit One" Balcomb Residence, Santa Fe, New Mexico, United States (William Lumpkins, 1979)
- The first Zero Energy Design home, Oklahoma, United States (Larry Hartweg, 1979)[22]
- Saunders Shrewsbury House, Shrewsbury, Massachusetts, United States (Norman B. Saunders, 1981)[1][23]
- Multiple IEA SHC "Task 13" houses, Worldwide (IEA SHC, 1989)
- Multiple passive houses in Darmstadt, Germany (Bott, Ridder & Westermeyer, 1990)[24]
- Heliotrope, Freiburg im Breisgau, Germany (Rolf Disch, 1994)[25]
- The Druk White Lotus School, Ladakh, India (Arup, 2002)[26]
- 31 Tannery Project, Branchburg, New Jersey, United States (2006)
- Sun Ship, Freiburg im Breisgau, Germany (Rolf Disch, 2006)[25]
See also
References
- Denzer, Anthony (2013). The Solar House: Pioneering Sustainable Design. Rizzoli. ISBN 978-0847840052. Archived from the original on 26 July 2013.
- Butti, Ken; Perlin, John (1981). A Golden Thread (2500 Years of Solar Architecture and Technology). Van Nostrand Reinhold. ISBN 0-442-24005-8.
- Department of Energy, Milestone Buildings of the 20th Century, archived from the original on 4 February 2008
- Boyce, Robert (1993). Keck & Keck: The Poetics of Comfort. Princeton, NJ: Princeton Architectural Press. ISBN 1-878271-17-2.
- Jacobs, Herbert Austin; Katherine Jacobs (1978). Building with Frank Lloyd Wright: an illustrated memoir. SIU Press. ISBN 9780809312917.
- Taylor, Carol (10 August 2008). "Taylor: Nation's first solar-heated home was in Boulder". The Daily Camera. Retrieved 4 November 2009.
- Denzer, Anthony; Novikova-Kinney, Polina, "Arthur T. Brown: Pioneer of Passive Solar Architecture" (PDF), 2010 ASES National Solar Conference, archived from the original (PDF) on 28 April 2011
- Solar Energy Applications in Houses, F Jäger, Pergamon Press, ISBN 0-08-027573-7
- Henry P. Glass and World War II, MIT Design Issues: Volume 22, Number 4 Autumn 2006
- Interiors, August 1950
- First Commercial Solar Building Marks 50th Anniversary
- McVeigh, J.C. (1976). "Developments in solar energy utilisation in the United Kingdom". Solar Energy. 18 (5): 381–385. doi:10.1016/0038-092x(76)90002-5.
- Fleming, Roscoe (27 September 1957). "Solar House in Colorado Cost $40,000". The Christian Science Monitor. p. 15.
- Mother Earth News (November–December 1979), Harry Thomason - Solar Energy (Plowboy Interview)
- Porteous, Colin; Kerr MacGregor (2005). Solar architecture in cool climates. Earthscan. pp. 88–89. ISBN 9781844072811.
- Mother Earth News (July–August 1973), Steve and Holly Baer: Dome Home Enthusiasts (Plowboy Interview)
- "He warms his house with barrels of heat". Popular Science. October 1973.
- Mother Earth News (September–October 1976), Harold R. Hay: Solar Pioneer (Plowboy Interview)
- Marlatt; et al. (1984), Roof Pond Systems: DOE Technical Report (PDF)
- MIT Libraries (1978), MIT Buildings: Solar V
- Johnson, Timothy E. (1981), MIT solar building No. 5: the third year performance, OSTI 6560657
- "Zero Energy Design ABUNDANT ENERGY in Harmony With Nature". Retrieved 26 November 2010.
- Shurcliff, William A. (1982). Saunders Shrewsbury House. (self-published).
- Passivhaus Institut, archived from the original on 22 March 2008
- Rolf Disch Solar Architecture - Architect's website
- World Architecture Awards - Arup’s education project is a triple award winner Archived 10 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.