Durability of Passive House Components: A 30 Year Example

Professor Wolfgang Feist will talk about his paper examining how the long term durability of Passive House components in the world's first Passive House in Darmstadt, Germany has affected the building's performance.

About the paper:

The passive house concept specifically improves insulation of exterior building components, utilisation of passive solar gains, airtightness and heat recovery from ventilation air. Reducing also heat losses from thermal bridges, the energy balance is improved significantly resulting in net heating demands lower than 15 kWh/(m²a) which is less than one-tenth of the typical heating energy in the average of existing buildings. The design concept can be used for every new building, and many thousand examples have so far been built for different use, in several climates and based on different construction type (e.g. concrete, timber, mixed). The very first prototype is a terraced house with four dwellings built 1990/1991 in Darmstadt. This building uses typical masonry external walls, concrete floors and a timber roof and can be seen as a representative example for highly energy-efficient construction. By monitoring all relevant energy flows through the building’s envelope during a period of more than 25 years, it has been confirmed that the energy consumption is as extraordinarily low as designed and stable over the whole period. This article especially investigates how this has affected the indoor climate, the indoor air quality and the durability of all components. By thorough investigation, an assessment of the maintenance cycles is given, which are representative for this construction type. The main characteristics of the components and the ventilation system after 25 years of performance of the pilot building have been determined; these are typical for passive house quality components; therefore, the results are indicative for the concept. The passive house concept turns out to be not only energy-saving but also most notably very durable and extraordinarily low-maintenance.

There are two webinar sessions available to iPHA members:

** August, 19, 2020**

Session 1: 90 minutes (2 CEPH) 09:00 CEST

Session 2: 90 minutes (2 CEPH) 18:00 CEST

The booking period for this event is over.

Where does the event happen? Online Webinar

When does the event happen?
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Tickets

Normal Ticket

€30.00 incl. 16% VAT

iPHA Member Ticket

The iPHA member ticket is available for members of the International Passive House Association only.

free