North American Passive House Network Announces the completed Program Schedule of the PH2021 Conference
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The NAPHN 2021 conference program is set to provide an expanded range of topics that make Passive House relevant to new occupancies and audiences. NEW YORK (PRWEB) May 13, 2021 The North American Passive House Network (NAPHN) today announced that the Passive House 2021 Conference: Passive House For All program schedule has been completed.
The program is organized around the idea that Passive House should serve everyone and be accessible to everyone. Sessions feature a wide, and emerging, range of projects and intersecting interests - in use, region, climate, construction type, and audience - demonstrating that Passive House can be a core tool in making sustainable communities, more equitable living conditions, higher-skilled workers, healthy populations, and climate solutions.
North American Passive House Network Announces the Opening of the PH2021 Conference Online Expo
Share Article NEW YORK (PRWEB) May 10, 2021 The North American Passive House Network (NAPHN) today announced the opening of the Passive House 2021 Conference: Passive House For All expo. Registered attendees can utilize the online expo from May 10 through the end of the conference on June 11.
The online expo is on a powerful new platform this year that allows attendees and exhibitors to more readily reach out, connect, meet and exchange information, much like an in-person event.
Exhibitors include leading Passive House manufacturers, suppliers, and service providers, from NYSERDA and Rockwool, to Zehnder, Swegon, Intus Windows, 475 High Performance Building Supply, Wythe Windows, Rothoblaas, Steven Winter Associates, Mitsubishi Electric, Owens Corning, NYC Accelerator, Bright Power, Cascadia Windows & Doors, and mor
University of Kansas architecture graduate students and professor Dan Rockhill are in the midst of building Monarch Village, a sustainable housing project at the Lawrence Community Shelter. The project will consist of 12 temporary housing units made out of recycled shipping containers. The houses, built by 18 graduate students, are to be placed close together on about an acre of land next to the shelterâs main building and surrounding the existing community garden, according to the Studio 804 class website.Â
Rockhill has taught the class, Studio 804, since it began at KU in 1995. Every year since then, Studio 804 designs and builds a structure within the time frame of a school year. Most of their projects are located between the Lawrence and Kansas City areas, including some structures on KUâs campus. The majority of Studio 804âs projects have consisted of single family homes that are put on the market once completed.Â