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    Energy Department announces winners of 2015 Race to Zero student design competition

    04/24/2015

    The Energy Department announced winners of its second annual Race to Zero Student Design Competition, a collegiate competition engaging university students to design zero energy-ready homes. A zero energy-ready home is a high-performance home that is so energy efficient it can offset all or most of its annual energy consumption with renewable energy. This significantly reduces a home's annual electricity costs while improving comfort, health, safety, and durability.

    The awards recognize students who excel at integrating solid building science principles into designs for zero energy-ready homes including creative solutions to real-world problems. Criteria for recognition included adherence to the Department's Zero Energy Ready Home program criteria, clear project plans, and overall competency in applying best practices from the Department's Building America program. Top priorities for each entry are geared toward developing cost-effective, market-ready, zero energy-ready homes.

    The competition is intended to inspire next-generation architects, engineers, and construction managers to apply the latest building science innovations in new and existing buildings. A major goal of the competition as it grows in popularity is to advance building science curriculum in university programs across the country. Competing undergraduate students, graduate students, and university faculty are at the forefront of a leadership movement to design truly sustainable homes.

    This year's competition featured 33 teams from 27 universities. Over the last several months, students were tasked with redesigning an existing floor plan or creating a new house design to meet the competition's cost-effective, high-performance home energy requirements. The final portion of the competition concluded at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) in Golden, Colorado, April 18-19, as the students presented their innovative designs to a panel of national experts. These experts included leading high-performance home builders, building science professionals, building product manufacturer technical experts, and national laboratory research scientists.

    Eighteen awards were given in five categories:
     

    Grand Winner
    University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota

    Grand Winner Finalists
    Appalachian State University, Boone, North Carolina
    Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
    Pennsylvania College of Technology Williamsport, Williamsport, Pennsylvania
    University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign–Team Illinois, Champaign, Illinois

    Analysis Excellence
    Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, Georgia
    Ryerson University–Team DAS Haus, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
    University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, California
    Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, Virginia

    Design Excellence
    Penn State University, State College, Pennsylvania
    Prairie View A&M University, Prairie View, Texas
    Ryerson University's Department of Architectural Science–Team Provenance Lane, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
    Ryerson University's Department of Architectural Science–Team Øzone, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
    University of Las Vegas, Las Vegas, Nevada

    Systems Integration Excellence
    Illinois State University–Team Redbird Red, Normal, Illinois
    Penn State University, State College, Pennsylvania
    Ryerson University's Department of Architectural Science–Team Øzone, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
    Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, Virginia

    The Department also announced it will hold the 2016 Race to Zero Student Design Competition next April at NREL.

    Energy.gov

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