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Solar Building Automatically Shades Itself From The Sun

Tuesday, December 04, 2007

Solar Building Automatically Shades Itself From The Sun




The Devonshire Building is a very green building, that automatically opens and closes banks of shades on it’s south facing façade. The “intelligent” system tracks the amount of sunlight entering the windows, and takes into account the time of day and season. The key architectural aim was to design a building that would incorporate as much natural daylight as physically possible. The blinds help manage overheating, and they are backed up by a geothermal cooling system. To top it all off, the building has solar modules on it’s roof that generate 25 kW of power.




The building’s large roof area also allowed the construction of a rainwater harvest system. The rain is collected via a symphonic rainwater system and then fed into a 20,000 liter underground tank. If the rainwater tank overfills, it overflows to a 40,000 liter geothermal tank to replenish the water for a heat sink that acts as a cooling source for the building and services’ systems.




The Devonshire Building was designed by the Dewjoc architecture firm. It is home to the Institute for Research and Sustainability at the University of Newcastle.






There’s more details on the building: on the Levolux and Corus websites.

  1. Anonymous Anonymous said:

    It's great to see more ecofirendly designs. Soon buildings will be able to produce more energy than they consume.

    -Diana Moneymaker

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    I make a living by Forex investing
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  1. Anonymous Anonymous said:

    I love natural light in my bedroom, so this is totally the kind of building I'd like to work in


    Celebrity Juice - http://celebrity-juice.blogspot.com

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