Access

Published online 2 April 2008 | Nature | doi:10.1038/452520a

Architecture: Architects of a low-energy future

Low- and zero-energy buildings could have a huge impact on energy use and carbon emissions. We have the technologies, but if they are to mitigate climate change, green-building design must hit the mass market, says Declan Butler.

Comments

Reader comments are usually moderated after posting. If you find something offensive or inappropriate, you can speed this process by clicking 'Report this comment' (or, if that doesn't work for you, email webadmin@nature.com). For more controversial topics, we reserve the right to moderate before comments are published.

  • I'm not an architect, but I do design preliminary floor plans for houses, with some component specifications. I'm working on my concept of "vernacular green," an affordable approach which gives priority to what lowers the operating costs. Solar thermal panels to heat water is one example. I design to minimize costs wherever I can; e.g. simple footprints. In much of the USA, the need [see FEMA 320 on the Internet for free] for high wind-resistance happily coincides with lower operating costs in the options of Insulating Concrete Forms and Monolithic Dome. Greensburg, Kansas, hit by an EF5 tornado last May, should become a prime example of both vernacular green and the best tornado-resistance, but so far leaders have chosen to omit the latter from their priority list.

    • 02 Apr, 2008
    • Posted by: Jean SmilingCoyote