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Disclaimer: This
report was prepared as an account of work sponsored by an agency
of the United States government. Neither the United States government,
nor any agency thereof, nor any of their employees, makes any warranty,
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Executive Summary Scope of this Report This report aims to summarize the work performed during the entire project period of 9/1/1999 through 6/30/06 for a comprehensive account of the Building America Industrialized Housing Partnership (BAIHP) project. It describes in greater detail, the work performed during the last year of the contract, 4/1/05 through 6/30/06, as efforts prior to 4/1/05 are comprehensively documented in previous project annual reports. For the previous three annual reports, see: BAIHP Team The BAIHP team is the only university based Building America team competitively funded by the US Department of Energy, Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy-Building Technologies program. BAIHP began work on September 1, 1999 with a focus on improving energy efficiency, durability, and indoor air quality of new industrialized housing. The BAIHP team is comprised of:
In addition the American Lung Association, North Carolina A&T University, D.R.Wastchak, Oregon Dept. of Energy, Idaho Dept of Water Resources and the Blue Sky Foundation were subcontractors in prior years. The Florida Energy Office and the NorthWest Energy Efficiency Alliance provided cost share funding in the early years of the project. The project website is www.baihp.org. Background Industrialized housing includes manufactured housing (built to the HUD code), modular housing (factory built housing modules assembled on site), panelized/kit housing (factory built sub-assemblies put together on site) production housing (site built housing produced in a systematic manner). Figure E-1 shows 2005 U.S. home production by sector. BAIHP work includes:
BAIHP Technical Assistance The BAIHP team provided technical assistance to a wide variety of home manufacturers, builders, developers, and industry suppliers including Habitat for Humanity International and its affiliates throughout the nation. Site builders receiving technical assistance are located primarily North and Central Florida. BAIHP also collaborates with suppliers and non-profit organizations See Table E-1 for a list of BAIHP Industry Partners. Industry Partners list is kept updated at /partners/index.htm Systems engineering forms the core of the Building America approach. BAIHP industry partners evaluate the integration of their construction standards and consider improvements that enhance energy efficiency, durability, indoor air quality, and health. In providing technical assistance BAIHP generally recommends improving equipment efficiency and reducing conditioning loads while taking durability and health issues into consideration. Some examples include: Improving Equipment Efficiency
Reducing Conditioning Loads
Durability and Health Issues Considered
It is the combination of these improvements that enables the BAIHP industry partners to achieve high performance homes like those documented in Table E-2, Homes Built in Partnership with BAIHP. BAIHP tracks Industry Partners production in 4 categories:
Since inception, BAIHP has assisted home builders and manufacturers to construct:
These homes are estimated to save over $17 million annually in reduced energy bills for their owners.
Table E-1. BAIHP Industry Partners (Present and Past)
Table E-2. Homes Built in Partnership
with BAIHP (through 06/06)
BAIHP Research
BAIHP’s ongoing research strives to identify the strategies and technologies that will enable Industry Partners to reach the Department of Energy’s 2010 goals for energy savings. By systematically evaluating the savings potential technologies and construction techniques, research provides the home building industry with vital information needed to meet this challenge. BAIHP Research presented here is grouped into three categories: Manufactured Housing Research, Site Built Housing Research, and Field and Laboratory Building Science Research. Manufactured Housing Research BAIHP has found that using the systems engineering approach to help Industry Partners solve building science related problems develops a strong working relationship and increases the likelihood of the Partner incorporating concepts central to achieving Building America goals such as sealed and tested ducts, right sizing air conditioning, and moisture management. BAIHP’s work with the manufactured housing industry illustrates this principal. BAIHP conducted research for manufactured homes in both field and laboratory which is reported in the following summaries in the main body of the report:
Site Built Housing Research Industry Partners rise above “business as usual” production to strive toward the Building America program goals of saving 40% of total energy use while improving durability, indoor air quality, and comfort. BAIHP assists the builders, much as described in Section II, Technical Assistance, but goes on to instrument and collect relevant data to validate the approach. BAIHP conducted research for site built housing which is reported in the following summaries:
Field and Laboratory Building Science Research BAIHP builds on a 20 year foundation of basic building science research at the Florida Solar Energy Center. This research generally focuses on issues important in hot-humid climates similar to Florida’s but is relevant to our understanding of building science concepts manifest in all climatic regions. BAIHP has conducted field and laboratory building science research in these areas:
BAIHP Training and Education Summary BAIHP research is communicated to public and industry audiences through the BAIHP web page, conference papers and presentations, and various media coverage. Training events are listed in reverse chronological order. BAIHP has presented research findings and Building America systems engineering concepts to a variety of audiences including architects, builders, HUD Code home manufacturers, and housing decision makers; construction trades and realtors; attendees at building science conferences; portable classroom producers and decision makers; energy raters and green home certifiers, and college students in academic venues. The BAIHP web page offers access to any interested parties with presentation of case studies, research, publications, and partnership summaries with links to our partners’ web pages, BAIHP monitored data pages, and BAIHP case studies. BAIHP Collaboration BAIHP researchers collaborate with a variety of entities in the homebuilding industry and the energy efficiency and research realm including DOE National Labs, Code and Standards Bodies, and Industry/Professional Organizations, Universities, and Product Suppliers. BAIHP research has provided data to update the NFPA codes that serve as the basis for the HUD code BAIHP Project Management BAIHP project management includes participating in Building America program reviews/meetings and preparing monthly and yearly reports for project activities as well as managing all project tasks (see Sections 1-6) and subcontracts. In the 5th Budget Period, BAIHP also held a Project Review Meeting at FSEC in January 2004 to give interested parties an opportunity to give feedback to the project management team. BAIHP participated in DOE’s Peer Review process in June of 2006. BAIHP Peer Review submittals for technical systems are available online at: /pubs/doe_review/index.htm Project Contact
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