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Home Energy Magazine Online May/June 1998
TRENDS
Affordable Housing: Efficient and Educational
 |
| Affordably priced townhouses in Chicago's Parkside Estates are built
to high-performance specifications, allowing them to be heated with a small
high-efficiency water heater and a fan coil. |
 |
| One of the townhouses is a demonstration home that is used for classes
and meetings in the craft and financing of low-energy housing. At this
meeting, people involved with the center discuss energy-efficient mortgages. |
Housing cannot be truly affordable unless it is
affordable to live in. A new low-income housing development in Chicago,
called Parkside Estates, uses energy-saving technologies to lower operating
costs without increasing purchase price. The development's model home is
also an office, meeting space, and training center, where low-energy technologies
are demonstrated to the public and local contractors learn how to build
truly affordable homes. This Affordable Energy Home Center opened in spring
1997, bridging the historically wide gap between sustainable and affordable
housing.
So far, 14 of the planned 89 units in Parkside
Estates have been built. These energy-efficient single-family homes are
in the Garfield Park neighborhood of Chicago's West Side. Over the past
30 years, Garfield Park has been challenged by a 40% unemployment rate,
deteriorating infrastructure, a high dropout rate, and residential and
business flight. It is currently a "focused area" for comprehensive development
under a local home ownership initiative called the Chicago Partners in
the American Dream. This initiative emphasizes access to public transportation,
defensible space, income diversity, energy efficiency, and environmental
improvements.
Parkside Estates is being built by a consortium
that includes the Chicago Department of Housing, Commonwealth Edison, Argonne
National Laboratory, and the U.S. Department of Energy. The general contractor
was Perry Bigelow, a nationally renowned builder of energy-efficient homes
(see "Perry Bigelow: Energy Efficiency Maestro,"
HE Mar/Apr '94, p. 13). Tying them together is Bethel New Life,
a Christian community development corporation that has developed over 1,200
units of affordable housing in West Garfield Park. Together, these institutions
seek to create livable-wage jobs and environmentally sustainable businesses
in this low-income community. In many low-income communities, residents
are faced with a choice between polluting jobs and no jobs at all. This
project aims to generate good jobs that do not create unnecessary pollution.
The Affordable Energy Home Center demonstrates
energy-efficient technologies and includes contractor training aids. It
features wall cutouts that reveal insulation materials and techniques,
and it has a computer workstation to train contractors in Home Energy Rating
System (HERS) software and the use of Internet resources. The center has
hosted workshops in the art and science of new construction and rehabilitation,
featuring instruction from John Katrakis and Paul Knight (author of "Chicago
Apartments Get New Lease on Life," HE Mar/Apr '97, p. 23). Staff
at the center also provide technical assistance to contractors interested
in creating jobs for community residents. Most importantly, the center
gives housing groups an example of effective, low-cost techniques that
save energy and increase comfort.
Instructors emphasizes the whole-house approach
to construction, investing in conservation measures that pay back through
lower utility bills, and using sustainable construction products wherever
possible. Since the center opened, two sessions of classes have been held
for general contractors. The first session focused on new construction;
the second on the rehabilitation of existing housing. In addition, the
center has been used for classes on the Illinois HERS in conjuction with
the state's Department of Commerce and Community Affairs and for classes
in environmentally safe housing in collaboration with Wright College. To
date, over 60 people have been trained in formal courses at the center.
Innovation for Conservation
The sidewalls in the development have both R-13
fiberglass batts in the wall cavities and R-7 rigid board insulation behind
the exterior siding. This is a substantial increase over the level of insulation
in most affordable homes. Careful air sealing has always been a hallmark
of Bigelow homes. The completed center has 650 CFM air leakage at 50 Pascals
(CFM50) or 5.2 air changes per hour (ACH); the estimated natural
infiltration is 45 CFM or .36 ACH.
A sealed-combustion water heater also provides
space heat, saving space, energy costs, and purchase cost. Future units
may incorporate solar water heating, further lowering energy bills.
Although the use of floor joist spaces as hot-air
ducts is controversial, they were used in this house. Only joists between
the first and second floor were used, so that duct losses would not leave
the thermal envelope. Furthermore, the joist plenums were lined with drywall
and all joints were foamed. Bigelow makes a practice of placing a tilted
piece of drywall at the end of the duct path to direct air up or down to
the vent. This tilted piece is carefully foamed or caulked to ensure that
air doesn't get to the exterior walls.
The demo house received a HERS rating of 89.7.
Typical ratings for new construction in low-income neighborhoods in Chicago
are between 72 and 75.
Knowledge to the People
Bigelow built Parkfield Estates to contribute to
a healthy, sustainable community in West Garfield Park. When families visit
the center, local college students or the development's sales agent show
them the importance of energy efficiency and its benefits. They give visitors
pamphlets describing what individuals can do to reduce wasteful energy
use in their homes. They also encourage visitors to practice energy conservation.
The importance of Parkside Estates --and of its
demo home--is not just local. It is worldwide. The energy-efficient technologies
and techniques demonstrated in the center show how low-income communities
can play a role in the international effort to reduce greenhouse gas production.
--James Cavallo and Trinette Britt
James Cavallo is manager of the Existing Buildings
Efficiency Research Program at Argonne National Laboratory in Argonne,
Illinois. Trinette Britt is vice president for housing and community development
at Bethel New Life Community Development Corporation in the West Garfield
neighborhood of Chicago.
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