How This Midcentury Modern House Harnesses the Sun

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  • Опубликовано: 9 мар 2022
  • The term ‘Solar Home’ was coined in Chicago in the 1940s. Despite the recent declaration of the term, good practices around orientation and window placement have been around centuries. But, coming off the Great Depression, coupled with the proliferation of glazing and emerging technology such as air-conditioning, architects and the public felt the benefits of passive solar design more acutely. This video visits the Schweikher House, built during the 1930s, to explore its passive solar techniques. It is not a ‘Solar Home,’ per se, but the architect worked closely with George Keck, prior to its construction and it incorporates many of principles that would get codified later on. George Keck pioneered solar research in architecture and created the first ‘Solar Home,’ a project the video explores at the ‘Houses of Tomorrow’ exhibition at the Elmhurst Art Museum.
    Solar Information:
    www.elmhurstartmuseum.org/fro...
    Schweikher House:
    www.schweikherhouse.org/
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    Stewart Hicks is an architectural design educator that leads studios and lecture courses as an Associate Professor in the School of Architecture at the University of Illinois at Chicago. He also serves as an Associate Dean in the College of Architecture, Design, and the Arts and is the co-founder of the practice Design With Company. His work has earned awards such as the Architecture Record Design Vanguard Award or the Young Architect’s Forum Award and has been featured in exhibitions such as the Chicago Architecture Biennial and Design Miami, as well as at the V&A Museum and Tate Modern in London. His writings can be found in the co-authored book Misguided Tactics for Propriety Calibration, published with the Graham Foundation, as well as essays in MONU magazine, the AIA Journal Manifest, Log, bracket, and the guest-edited issue of MAS Context on the topic of character architecture.
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Комментарии • 857

  • @tyjaham
    @tyjaham 2 года назад +1941

    This one took me back to my undergrad days doing net-zero design. I think it's really fascinating how many residential projects these days try to brute force green design practices with panels and finishes while almost completely ignoring site and orientation when those factors are so powerful in this conversation.

    • @HantaleMedia
      @HantaleMedia 2 года назад +46

      It'd be interestng to review the cost/benefit tradeoff of solar and net-zero design. Most new houses where I live are thrown up as cheaply as possible: Templates with optional extras. Little regard for the efficient design principles you'll learn about.
      What are the savings like compared to the higher cost of the home? What's the timescale of that investment? etc. Those nitty gritty details we don't often get to see in a formal video.

    • @kschleic9053
      @kschleic9053 2 года назад +17

      @@HantaleMedia the only mandatory increased expense in a passive solar design is in the design and construction labor, as fixed windows are the same $/sqft as mid tier siding materials.

    • @NathanWeberTheDesigner
      @NathanWeberTheDesigner 2 года назад +55

      @@HantaleMedia I've built a couple of residential projects like this. There's a... not insignificant.. construction cost increase for sure. But my clients have reported more than enough energy savings to cover the increased loan due to sustainable design.
      I was one of the student leaders on the 2013 Solar Decathlon home 'Desert Sol' and started my first company immediately after college. So I've have quite a few people come to me for this type of thing in my professional life. Most of the time they never makes it past design, but sometimes they do.
      The clients who are living in those homes are all satisfied and see financial benefit. But I've never seen hard proof from them (like energy bills or anything), so take this with a grain of salt. I've always wanted to find a client who would let me install sensors for post-construction data gathering, but have never felt comfortable asking (yet).

    • @metricstormtrooper
      @metricstormtrooper 2 года назад +53

      Site orientation is generally for those who have the $ to buy a block of land large enough to take advantage of that orientation, and who are building in an area where the local council will Not mandate which direction you home faces.

    • @HantaleMedia
      @HantaleMedia 2 года назад +6

      @@NathanWeberTheDesigner That's mostly what I've seen in the research I've done. It appears to be roughly 'cost effective', but you definitely get diminishing returns as well. There was a good overview by some texas-based home designers somewhere on youtube that's worth a look.

  • @walterpleyer261
    @walterpleyer261 2 года назад +579

    Some smart peron once said that a smart building isn't necessarily one with lots of electronics etc, but a smart layout from the beginning, so you don't need the fancy stuff in the first place.
    This building is a great example for this approach.

    • @62Cristoforo
      @62Cristoforo 2 года назад +43

      As with most things, the less moving parts (and electronics) the less chance of breakdowns.

    • @brentgreeff1115
      @brentgreeff1115 2 года назад +13

      I have put an incredible amount of thought into this lately - I am in Thailand and was living in a house where the bedroom wall faces the afternoon sun. - its a very thin brick - by 5pm the wall - on the inside - is so hot to the touch, its unbelievable. - the house then bakes until 3am - so everyone runs their aircons all day & night. - its an apartment building and electricity is included in the rent everyone pays - so... the landlord pays the aircon bill for 12 units. - this is not an outlier. - baffles the mind how such little thought goes into house design. Have you ever noticed that Japanese houses have an entrance area where you can take off your shoes & there are storage cupboard so you don't have to take all kinds of junk into the house if its just coming out again? - most buildings are just walls - and you can choose what colour you paint them - the lack of care for its occupants is shocking. - I can prove my point with a simple example. - how many people want a cold shower? - would it not make a lot more sense to have HOT & WARM tap in the shower? - then you are not mixing boiling hot & freezing water - then the hot water does not have to be so hot it can take your skin off - which happens to many many people including children every day. - 30C ( for warm ) and 50C ( for hot ) means you can have a huge mixing range to find the perfect temp.

    • @strider_hiryu850
      @strider_hiryu850 2 года назад +11

      the confusion of "smart" design with tech is truly fascinating

    • @bradevans7935
      @bradevans7935 Год назад +2

      @@62Cristoforo Exactly. The KISS principle at work.

    • @udishomer5852
      @udishomer5852 Год назад +12

      Passive heating and cooling designs were used for at least 3,000 years.
      We seem to have forgotten them these days, as most buildings are designed with zero regard to the climate, sun and wind.

  • @Xaac1609
    @Xaac1609 2 года назад +659

    My parents actually did something similar when designing their home. The Balcony railing on the south side is intentionally build to allow climbing plants to use it. In the sommer, these plants grow leaves that throw shade on the windows below, while in Winter all the leaves are gone and the Sun can easily heat up the House. This seriously saves quite some energy.

    • @darksentinel082
      @darksentinel082 2 года назад +64

      That sounds not only really smart but really pretty in the summer as well

    • @RialuCaos
      @RialuCaos 2 года назад +35

      Very clever use of nature. If only such considerations were more widespread.

    • @paolopasaol9700
      @paolopasaol9700 2 года назад +24

      🐻&🦝: Did someone say food source?

    • @susyguima
      @susyguima 2 года назад +8

      @@daviddou1408 grapes, kiwis, passionfruits, chayote, etc

    • @steamedclam1
      @steamedclam1 2 года назад +5

      @@susyguima 😋 my stomach’s growling now

  • @christopherpardell4418
    @christopherpardell4418 2 года назад +18

    My grandfather’s house had a cool trick for keeping food fresh, built back before refrigerators. There was a vertically oriented cabinet built into the Kitchen cabinetry. When you opened it, the shelves were all wooden grids. Stick your head in and you saw that the top and bottom of the cabinet were open; on the bottom, into the basement/crawl space of the house, on the top into the attic space, where there was a large Venturi vent to allow hot air accumulating in the attic to escape. When you stuck your hand into the cabinet, you could always feel a gentle breeze blowing up, pulling cool air from the crawl space up into the attic. So, say you wanted to keep a head of lettuce or something like that fresher for longer, and your literal icebox simply did not have the room, and anyway was too cold. You cut the head of lettuce in half and placed each half on a plate and put it in the cabinet, then you poured a little water into the plate and covered it with a cloth. The water would wick up into the cloth, and the constant breeze blowing in the closed cabinet would cause the water in the cloth to evaporate, dropping the temperature inside the cloth by 15 or 20 degree. My grandfather told me all the houses built back when his were built had such cabinets, but most people in the 1960s didn’t know what they were for and so they closed off the top and bottom and put in normal shelving. In the 1960’s he still used his to make produce last longer.

    • @PlanetIscandar
      @PlanetIscandar 2 года назад

      *Christopher Pardell* A very interesting trick that surely does not originate from "barbarians". I bet, not many people paid attention to your comment.

  • @busharmann
    @busharmann 2 года назад +468

    The complete opposite approach from where I am. I work as an architect in Thailand which is very hot and high humidity in all seasons. The approach we go for is limited to blocking out the heat and extra ventilation flow. Facing our opening at north side and solid wall at the south. Lifting our floor to stay away from the ground to create air barrier for humidity when floor start release heat in the evening.

    • @idromano
      @idromano 2 года назад +55

      I'm from Brazil and I feel you. I always find it fun how north America and Europe call a nice weather "warm" and love big windows facing the sun

    • @busharmann
      @busharmann 2 года назад +24

      @@idromano the adopting of glass box trend here is a huge problem

    • @cchangg
      @cchangg 2 года назад +30

      I'm a Taiwanese living in Canada.... I found both world of building technique super interesting.

    • @g0d5m15t4k3
      @g0d5m15t4k3 2 года назад +52

      Yeah, each site needs its own design specifications for its relative weather. I super dig the idea of designing a home for where it is actually going to reside. Problems happen when you just chose from a catalog and completely ignore where it's going to be built.

    • @busharmann
      @busharmann 2 года назад +27

      @@g0d5m15t4k3 That's the problem with modern houses in SEA people want those shiny glass box and dump AC on it.

  • @luxill0s
    @luxill0s 2 года назад +368

    The piano cover of "House of the Rising Sun" in the beginning was a nice touch. This video is so fascinating, I always thought it was interesting to find clever ways to keep houses heated/cooled without ever needing a typical hvac system.

    • @johnl5316
      @johnl5316 2 года назад +15

      I thought it suggested the need for brothels to have more sunlight.

    • @salty6pence672
      @salty6pence672 Год назад +2

      Check out the cover songs done for the show WestWorld on HBO ( Westworld Piano songs) They are amazing works of art. All available on RUclips. they are played by Ramin Djawadi.

    • @garymccallum4152
      @garymccallum4152 Год назад +1

      The Passive Solar Energy Book published in 1979 has all the information you deed to design a solar home. These days with the low price of Solar PV systems it is easy to design a net zero home

  • @StephenCoorlas
    @StephenCoorlas 2 года назад +465

    Architecture shaped by functionality; a timeless design principle. This is the good stuff.

    • @Jan-hf3ip
      @Jan-hf3ip 2 года назад +3

      Also so much prettier. Love the house.

    • @Peglegkickboxer
      @Peglegkickboxer Год назад +3

      It's almost like we havea whole field dedicated to it called engineering.

    • @firehorsewoman414
      @firehorsewoman414 Год назад +1

      @@Peglegkickboxer hahaha

    • @StephenCoorlas
      @StephenCoorlas 7 месяцев назад

      @@Peglegkickboxer Almost...

  • @tomsitzman3952
    @tomsitzman3952 2 года назад +73

    These ideas were used by German farmers living along the Volga River in the Kanton of Frank in the 1800's. Their homes were dug about 4 feet below grade level. So you stepped down about four steps into the house. The walls were made of a mixture of mud and straw with no north facing windows. The south facing windows did not allow indirect summer sun. In the winter the sun reached about 20 feet into the rooms. A thermal mass Russian style stove kept the houses comfortable in the winter, using very little fuel. A few of theses homes were built on farms in Nebraska in the l1890's. They were said to be very warm in the winter and cool in the summer heat.

    • @alexgunner1882
      @alexgunner1882 7 месяцев назад +2

      This used to be common knowledge. Amazing how people today dump fortunes into homes with windows facing north, then spend insane amounts to heat them up

    • @jacklynnmjackson2383
      @jacklynnmjackson2383 6 месяцев назад

      Idk, seems like common sense to me.

  • @christopherstephenjenksbsg4944
    @christopherstephenjenksbsg4944 2 года назад +193

    All of these principles are so basic to good building, but so often ignored these days. It seems like many architects and their clients think that modern HVAC systems can make a space comfortable using brute force. Not only is this incredibly wasteful and expensive; it often doesn't work. As an example, a friend of mine worked in a tall office building in the Long Island City section of Queens built in the late 1980s. The building was sheathed entirely in glass, with architect-designed mylar shades in the south and west-facing spaces. Despite this, these spaces were impossible to work in even in the winter because of the heat gain. No amount of air conditioning could mitigate the problem. Those spaces are now used mainly as storage and utility rooms, or left empty.
    The Schweikher House has very much the same vibe as many of Frank Lloyd Wright's Usonian houses. I wonder if they influenced each other.

    • @michaelcrockis7679
      @michaelcrockis7679 2 года назад +11

      In my experience far too many modern residential houses aren't touched with a hand of an architect. Clients hire designers instead. So the picture sells although no one thinks how it will work in real life. And more often than not it doesn't.

    • @altosack
      @altosack 2 года назад +7

      @@michaelcrockis7679 - I agree with your point, but the words you use have a different meaning to me. “Design” implies proper functionality to me, and “architect”, to me, evokes more “art” than design.
      Yes, I know “design” has been partially co-opted to mean form rather than function, but we must resist this! (As a mechanical design engineer, I _may_ have both some bias and a dog in this fight.)

    • @chlly
      @chlly 2 года назад +1

      @@altosack I think design is a more generalized term, whereas architect is a more specific niche within the umbrella of design. Designing always requires an input or parameter of some piece to unfold, so this could be for 'form' or for 'function'. I would always argue that even the most 'form' end results of designing are still performing a baseline function.

    • @hexidecimark
      @hexidecimark 2 года назад +5

      @@michaelcrockis7679 Designers? Hardly. It's far 'better' to just use the mathematically best house for ratio of money in to selling points out, and then copy-paste it across every biome universally in a maze of cul-de-sacs

    • @Ghost0fDawn
      @Ghost0fDawn Год назад +1

      I feel that this in large part is going to contribute to our energy and climate concerns. Regions having blackouts in the winter because every house in the region is trying to brute force HVAC itself to being warm, hoping it doesn't break down in the summer so no one bakes in their own home.
      Imagine how much energy could be saved if homes were built with these natural methods of transferring heat using science instead.

  • @stevemasonwilder9
    @stevemasonwilder9 2 года назад +47

    More vids like this please!
    I grew up in a passive solar heated house and can’t understand why there aren’t more new buildings that implement passive heating and cooling.

    • @idromano
      @idromano 2 года назад +11

      my wild guess is because it's harder to standardise. It's easier to make cookie-cutter houses and buildings and force HVAC on them

    • @MindBlowerWTF
      @MindBlowerWTF 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@idromano yeah, here all new builds are forced to use like 6 inches insulating boards from polystyrene and 3 pane windows with heat pumps, solar panels and forced ventilation. It is very expensive to build like this.

  • @mariannerichard1321
    @mariannerichard1321 11 месяцев назад +6

    I grew up in a mid 19th century farm house (c. 1850), the porch on the South facing façade was acting like the hang over part of the video. The sun would shine in on winter and not shine in at all on summer. Although, all the rest of the heat distribution mechanics were absent, it still helped a lot to keep the temperature even.

  • @davecisneros5285
    @davecisneros5285 2 года назад +20

    This method is used in cob houses. In studying them I read the winter sun at noon is the same angle as summer moon at midnight and vice versa. This was a way to get sight lines in order for opposing seasons though they are 6 months away.
    In addition to that, they would build just to the east of deciduous trees to get additional shading in the summer and sun in the winter. Natural shading is a huge cooling factor in the summer.

    • @adam__smith
      @adam__smith Год назад +2

      I visited northern Norway in early January a few years ago. Although the sun never rose, the full moon circled the horizon in the same way that the sun would in summer - as you described. It was beautiful, but a little disorienting (literally and figuratively).

  • @nacoran
    @nacoran 2 года назад +37

    I keep waiting for the phase change solar mass to hit the market. I saw something on it a few years back. It used sealed wax beads in the dry wall. The wax was formulated to go through a phase change at a specific temperature (near room temperature). That let it absorb a huge amount of energy whenever the room was above that temperature and then radiate it back when the temperature dropped. It took up much less space than traditional thermal mass and by adjusting the mix when making wax you could adjust the temperature the wall tried to keep the room at.

    • @62Cristoforo
      @62Cristoforo 2 года назад +4

      Fascinating concept

    • @TheRealPlato
      @TheRealPlato 3 месяца назад +1

      Imagine nicking the wall with a chair leg and all your insulation drains out into a puddle

  • @danaroyer3018
    @danaroyer3018 2 года назад +42

    Our house has some of these designs, including a foot of concrete underneath the section of floor receiving winter sun. On sunny winter days, the temperature in these rooms is always 2-5 degrees above the thermostat set point. So nice! At night we have shoji screens to pull across the glass, which helps with thermal retention.

  • @AlaskaSkidood
    @AlaskaSkidood 2 года назад +24

    Not sure if you have seen or heard of the Cold Climate Housing Reaserch Center (CCHRC) in Fairbanks, Alaska, but they have done a lot of research and experimentation with homes and buildings using passive solar to provide a more comfortable and affordable living space for people in the Arctic. They have a RUclips channel with videos that go in to some detail on these homes.
    You may also be interested in their office building which was built not only as a work space but also a testbed for some for the technologies and building techniques that have been pioneered by their work over the last 20 or so years.
    This video reminded me of some of their work regarding optimizing roof overhangs to allow 3 seasons of sunlight into a space and shade out the hot and constant summer sun. Keep up the good work!

  • @Ziegque
    @Ziegque 2 года назад +9

    I was incredibly privileged in the mid 1990s to receive a private tour of the Schweickher house. What a exceptional environment to live in. I was impressed on how the use of wood on the interior carried over to the shower, which was lined with cypress, I believe. Thank you for showcasing this beautiful home and its history.

  • @EnnesArms
    @EnnesArms 2 года назад +93

    I’ve heard of the solar home concept from Frank Lloyd Wright’s “solar hemicycle” Jacobs II house. It’s so interesting to see how other architects employed the concept in their own way!

    • @manuelka15
      @manuelka15 2 года назад +6

      I saw a bit of Jacobs II in Uni and never thought it might have a relation to the sun. Such awesome content in this channel and youtube nowadays, makes me feel as such an ignorant! but I'm glad I can learn more about these concepts now.

    • @rbasket8
      @rbasket8 Год назад

      Solar home comes from every popular Architecture, not from XX century. All around the globe, popular architecture had used in an intelligent way the natural factors.
      The problem is that during some period, specially in the "new world" people forgot that and built almost the same everywhere.

  • @sarah-jowatt-linnett5628
    @sarah-jowatt-linnett5628 2 года назад +15

    Your videos have made me realise just how much 'mid century modern' style was developed wayyy before the 50s.

  • @kevinn1158
    @kevinn1158 2 года назад +10

    That Schweikher House is gorgeous. I love the warm materials used and how the home creates a courtyard. 1 story homes also show a sensitivity and modesty. They never scream look at me, I was made to impress you. It also let's nature shine. It's like the house says, I fit into your domain. I respect nature. Thanks for the great video Stewart.

    • @friendlyfire7861
      @friendlyfire7861 Год назад

      I see what you mean, mostly, but I don't think the nature of this kind of design represents an effort to fit in or respect nature.

    • @tiagojordao4105
      @tiagojordao4105 Год назад +1

      @@friendlyfire7861 Neither modesty. People are clueless about the cost of these houses. The sofa at 09:05 is made of thousands of dollars in wood, not to mention the whole house is expensive wood and bricks. And the house is huge too, although most people apparently don't notice that.

  • @jeffwhyte8205
    @jeffwhyte8205 2 года назад +11

    Glad you were able to visit Stewart. This has been one of my favorite houses for decades. In fact, I had my architectural studio on the property for over for over 20 years. I was the building architect and assisted with all its restoration during that time. Curiously, your comments about the house are almost verbatim from the tour I developed and gave to hundreds of people. I can only guess that it was offer to you by the current staff. I really hope you enjoyed seeing it. Wish your could have come while Martyl still lived there. You would have noticed a distinct difference. Keep up the good work. Love your videos. Cheers.

  • @adrianzhang1706
    @adrianzhang1706 2 года назад +6

    This reminds me of a woman who gave a ted talk on her architectural designs involving curled bimetallic sheets. If the sun warmed up the sheet, one end would expand more than the other, unfurling the metal to shade the building. As it cooled down, it would unfurl to let in the light.

    • @62Cristoforo
      @62Cristoforo 2 года назад

      Isn’t that how a thermostat works? Bi-metal strips of two different materials with different coefficients of expansion?

  • @mikegilbert5434
    @mikegilbert5434 2 года назад +9

    As soon as I saw the image I yelled “Schweikehr House”!😂
    Truly my dream house with plenty of space for living and then that amazing work space for all the woodworking and crafts.

  • @MbahMu9829
    @MbahMu9829 2 года назад +2

    I took a semester regarding this subject in the architect school. it is a powerful knowledge indeed. but most architect forget or ignore it and opt for electrical/mechanical means to control light and temperature instead

  • @shesthebethest
    @shesthebethest 2 года назад +21

    Pretty sure that window orientation and a thermal mass floor is exactly what they do in earthships! So cool.

  • @hscott3417
    @hscott3417 2 года назад +81

    My question is, that if you walked around with an IR camera in one of these older solar homes, how “sealed” is it? Or are the deficiencies in the construction (gaps, old glass, improper fitment) even out weighed by the “efficiency” they have utilizing the Sun? It seems, as modern “green” design goes, it’s the engineers world for hvac… How well can I contain a space, in order to most precisely manipulate the conditions inside it. As opposed to actual symbiosis with the environment the building is being built in. PS love your content!

    • @byronarnold9747
      @byronarnold9747 2 года назад +15

      I think it comes down to integrated design principles and when you get the engineer involved. From my perspective as an engineering student it’s possible to have these conversations early in the design process and to establish the systems around the design. If we want to make a house/building that utilizes as many natural benefits to reduce the need for mechanical systems to run, some HVAC designers would be thrilled to face that challenge. You would spend more time on the exact design of the fenestrations and spend more money upfront for windows/other materials, but you would run some analysis to try and prove the long term effectiveness and cost savings. You also impact lighting designers with the way the light flows which might reduce the need for artificial light and reduce heat gain in that sense. Hopefully this helped or aids in a conversation! I love these videos as well and I’m a architectural engineer with a focus in structures. Our worlds are one in the same! We each just carry a different lens.

    • @tomsitzman3952
      @tomsitzman3952 2 года назад +5

      It has been my experience lining in one of these homes is that modern sealed double pain windows makes a world of difference.

    • @jphickory522
      @jphickory522 2 года назад

      I agree David..

    • @austindmeyer
      @austindmeyer 2 года назад +1

      I've been in this house on a 90 degree day and with all of the windows shut and it was a probably about 70 inside. Very comfortable.

  • @icalledthevoiditwent2voicemail
    @icalledthevoiditwent2voicemail Год назад +1

    I can't tell where Schweikher ends and Wright begins.
    Simply stunning. The beauty of the simplistic style is breathtaking.

  • @scientic1337
    @scientic1337 2 года назад +3

    Hello everyone undergrad student from Turkey here.
    There are more techniques in the sense of utilizing the sun. Especially in the middle east and north africa regions.
    Certain dome styles use different pressured airs (pressure, created by the flow of air) to ventilate, or the sun chimneys to create airflow yet again.
    Very good video also thank you for doing this.

  • @benjamindavenport1857
    @benjamindavenport1857 2 года назад +43

    Huge fan of your videos, have to be honest this is one of my favorites because passive design and siting is one of my personal favorite topics. It makes me think about Alvar Aalto (especially his choices for the siting of the MIT dormitory) and Lewis Mumford criticisms of the UN Building. Random thoughts: I would be really curious to see you do a video on how despite Modernism being seen as "international" it also grew out of masters in what Kenneth Frampton called critical regionalism (e.g. Aalto, Gaudi, Horta). Another topic that I think could be really interesting would be the design of "middle density" housing and how architects balance that. Or, similarly, design approaches for really small lots. Not that you don't clearly have enough good ideas coming out. Anyway, thanks for making me get a weekly dose of arch hist.

  • @emorysumi
    @emorysumi 2 года назад +2

    So happy the algorithm showed me this video. Thanks for making this awesome content.

  • @Ubi2447
    @Ubi2447 2 года назад +10

    Yes! I love that you're going to locations like this and exploring the architecture on site.
    What a stunning house. Can't wait for more, Stewart!

  • @rocketjim54
    @rocketjim54 2 года назад +8

    Stewart, thank you for sharing this video. Great topic. As it relates to the Schweikher House, I was struck by the materials used (brick, wood and glass) and the level and refinement of the work. So, I checked their website, checked the schedule and drove down for a visit this morning. What a wonderful find! Dan Fitzpatrick led me on a tour of this gem. I am not familiar but this is a masterpiece of architecture and engineering. A masterpiece, yet, a sublime one. Too much to describe but I will return. Thanks again for all of your videos, this one specifically. I shall return to Schaumburg soon.

  • @willhannah5902
    @willhannah5902 2 года назад +11

    It's very interesting to see the comparison between Illinois and Australian architecture which focuses less on the heating instead the cooling. A house is to be fully openable essentially just a roof for it to passively work in summer. Glenn Murcutt, Peter Stutchbury, Rick Leplastrier are good examples. That being said it still needs to accommodate for some cold winters. Loved the vid

    • @VanillaMacaron551
      @VanillaMacaron551 Год назад

      All of Australia still gets winters. I had to go and buy a heater when I lived in Mackay, Queensland. The entire southern half of the country has cold winters (not like Minnesota or Illinois) and is very suitable to solar passive design. There are houses in cold Canberra (near the Snowy Mountains) that need no heating because they can capture daylight heat and sun in winter.
      But winter sun coming into your house is beneficial even in tropical environments. Summers are getting too hot now for just natural cooling or breezes to work - especially considering insects etc.
      Better off incorporating well-insulated spaces with aircon and running it off solar power. Modern air con is v efficient and cheap to run.
      Interestingly my almost 100-year-old Queenslander house is incredibly efficient and comfortable using these techniques. And the north-facing deck makes you feel like a lizard who just wants to bask in the sun all day during winter.

  • @brunotvrs
    @brunotvrs Год назад +1

    I'm a very... demotivated architect considering a career change, but those videos, "basic" as they are (intended for non-architects), make me smile and feel glad I went to an architecture school, as limited and flawed an experience as it was.
    Thanks, Stewart!

    • @MrYoubrian
      @MrYoubrian 7 месяцев назад +1

      As a non architect, who is just a carpenter from Idaho, this is my passion. If I won the lottery I would spend the rest of my life with this puzzle-
      If you combine these ideas along side a micro home and make it as cheap as possible to build using the materials available onsite..... then there is NO REASON we can't house all of the homeless within 10 years.
      You should check out this school design by a New York architect-
      'An AD100 award-winning, sustainable school in Jaisalmer that aims to empower women" - by NY architect Diane Kellogg

  • @warrengans1346
    @warrengans1346 Год назад +1

    Sometimes I feel a "like" under appreciates a video. This is one of those times. Thank you, please keep this coming!

  • @JamilaMusayeva
    @JamilaMusayeva 2 года назад +6

    Your channel is a gem! Just found it to today and fell in love with your content immediately.

  • @CetHommeCuisine
    @CetHommeCuisine 3 месяца назад

    The amount of information - wisdom, even - distilled in this short video is astounding. Thank you.

  • @WestExplainsBest
    @WestExplainsBest 2 года назад +10

    Thank you for a great connection I can make in my math classes!
    Amazing application of angles!

  • @rabbit251
    @rabbit251 2 года назад +3

    It appears that other architects still apply these principles. My father's house in Wisconsin has a passive solar room on the south side of the house. It doesn't have the grates, but does have solar curtains to keep out the cold at night in winter and the heat out in summer. My father also put in two wall fans to pull the warm air out. In winter my father uses his furnace only once in the morning. He built his house in 1979-80. I was always surprised that this didn't incorporated in every house.

  • @piraterubberduck6056
    @piraterubberduck6056 2 года назад +16

    I love solar passive house design. I started looking at ideas for this alongside rammed earth construction. There is current research into using both in the construction of affordable housing in Canada. I hope solar passive design becomes used more again.

    • @62Cristoforo
      @62Cristoforo 2 года назад

      Arkopia, Winnipeg

    • @garymccallum4152
      @garymccallum4152 Год назад

      Find a copy of "The Passive Solar Energy Book" published in 1979 and available on line

  • @kevmagill5163
    @kevmagill5163 2 года назад +9

    This house may be a solar technological blueprint...but it's just freaking beautiful too...it's exactly the vibe I respond to, the wood, textiles, art, ceramics, rugs, furniture, layout, visual warmth...everything...it's 👏

  • @NadazRez
    @NadazRez 2 года назад +5

    The curator probably mentioned to you about The House of Tomorrow's current location and it's condition; so it's rather hard to get tours in and around it. Though it is located near some other World's Fair houses in Beverly Shores, Indiana. A good checking out of them and the shore if you're ever in The Region.

  • @savak1994
    @savak1994 2 года назад +3

    I have been looking into this subject for past week. It was enlightening to see your explanation on this.

  • @pamelah6431
    @pamelah6431 2 года назад +1

    I love homes that use clever "cheat codes" to beat nature instead of relying on electronic gadgetry. Very cool video.

  • @lycopodtakeover1692
    @lycopodtakeover1692 2 года назад +3

    Thank you for the empty cup comment, saved me some anxiety... Lovely video, an excellent topic.

  • @frazerrennie1340
    @frazerrennie1340 Год назад

    Thank you for making this. Very much appreciated.

  • @josephhuether1184
    @josephhuether1184 Год назад +2

    Recently visited Stratford Hall (1738) on a hot day in Virginia and was struck by (a) how cool the interior felt and (b) how good the naturally harvested light was within rooms with relatively small windows. Glass is set close to the exterior surfaces and the thick walls with splayed jambs do a phenomenal job at capturing and distributing natural light. I could easily read 20’ from exterior walls with no artificial lighting. Very balanced.

  • @Ceci-db8kh
    @Ceci-db8kh 2 года назад +5

    "techniques to maintain comfort all year round with minimal need for mechanical methods of heating, cooling or moving air" MUSIC TO MY EARS!!!

  • @blakekennemer1166
    @blakekennemer1166 2 года назад +2

    I just wrote a paper about how Usonian style houses were very ahead of their time. The tenants of organic architecture are things that we have come to learn improve mental health like sunlight and natural earth tones.

  • @jacks7991
    @jacks7991 2 года назад

    Love seeing you get out and about! Seeing you be invested in the subject matter you’re discussing is very engaging!

  • @Lasse89hotmailcom
    @Lasse89hotmailcom 2 года назад +2

    Great video. I love your explanation of the different passive solar techniques!

  • @eliottnowak6299
    @eliottnowak6299 2 года назад +1

    An amazing work as always on this channel, thanks a lot for what you do !

  • @elanthys
    @elanthys Год назад +2

    I love Midcentury Modern houses, such clean lines... This may be a precursor but it's just as great, thanks for showing it to us!

  • @chrismoody1342
    @chrismoody1342 2 года назад +5

    As an HVACContractor I’ve been involved in quite a few passive solar homes. Believe me they may help offset some of the energy demands for a home but in no way can completely condition a home fully.

    • @adannielsen2442
      @adannielsen2442 Год назад

      What if the structure is also set deeper into the ground to benefit from ground source heating

    • @wd8005
      @wd8005 11 месяцев назад

      @@adannielsen2442There’s no way you can fully condition a house with passive strategies. You can reduce the need for conditioning the house by carefully designing it for passive solar for heat gain during the winter + super insulated to retain heat & it needs to be air tight target 0.6 ACH or lower if you can. Look into the Passive House Standard if you want to know more about it. Certified Passive House is 90% more efficient than conventional built house.

  • @mattaudio
    @mattaudio 2 года назад +2

    This reminds mine of The Original Green by Steve Mouzon and his book about how we could control comfort the “pre-thermostat era.”

  • @timmmahhhh
    @timmmahhhh 2 года назад

    Stuart thank you for this video. Thanks to seeing this my wife and I toured the house today. I had no idea about this architect or his house and it was great to learn about both. Seeing this video and this house are both good refreshers to remind me of these principles from architecture college 32 years ago now.

  • @practicalporters
    @practicalporters Год назад +1

    We built our super insulated home in Fairanks Alaska with sun heat and 8 inches of insulation. (Rock wool and blue board foam is the best).
    We spent 1 week finding the perfect spot to face the sun in winter time on a hillside property. We have 3 large 4x4 fixed pain windows facing winter south. This has been 3 years of payoff as we have stunning mountian views along with vitamin D and massive amounts of warmth. The long 6 months of winter are very bearable now compared to 15 yrs living on the flat land in North Pole.
    For summer 24 hr sun: We installed cross breeze operable windows on the E/W sides and heavy shades for summer on the south side.
    My wife designed it with an expert sourdough builder down the street who showed us all the things 30 years of "wish he would have done but didn't ".
    So far we have no regrets.
    Cheers from Alaska.

  • @daveys
    @daveys Год назад

    Beautifully made and presented. Subscribed!

  • @swschilke
    @swschilke 2 года назад +1

    Dear Stewart, what about a video/ videos about architecture books? From books to learn things about architecture (text books to all sorts of books) to coffee (or tea) table books to please your eyes.

  • @GeoRedtick
    @GeoRedtick 4 месяца назад

    I have always wanted to design and build a passive heating home. I kind of wish I would have gone to architecture school, home architecture has also interested me so much. I love this house, thank you for sharing.

  • @marcob1729
    @marcob1729 2 года назад +3

    My house is passively heated, but it uses brick flooring for thermal mass, which I think is better than wood. The one thing I’ll say about passive solar is that most calculations leave you hanging in the early spring. It’s time distance from the winter solstice means that you’re already well into indirect solar mode by April 1 when you certainly still need heating

    • @MindBlowerWTF
      @MindBlowerWTF 5 месяцев назад

      You could still get small amount of solar collectors for warm water and use that water also for heating in autumn and spring. What do you use?

  • @JilSoniaMcDonald
    @JilSoniaMcDonald 2 года назад +3

    Absolutely brilliant! I'm an interior designer & have great respect for architects!

  • @digitalparadigms
    @digitalparadigms Год назад

    Masterpiece. Well put together presentation as well.

  • @gonsalomon
    @gonsalomon 2 года назад +1

    Took this as a solid piece of advice while designing my future home. Also, the low roof slope from another of your videos. Thanks for handing us this valuable data!
    As for the roof slope: a 4.5m takes a 80cm height for the tangent to get close to that angle. Or a 5.65m and a 1m height. Sorry for the lack of imperial units, metric ones are the way to do things where I live at.

  • @lukeblackford1677
    @lukeblackford1677 Месяц назад

    Yesterday I was searching “earth ships built to code” lol. I am now gonna search “passive solar home designs”. Thank you!

  • @BenBreard
    @BenBreard 2 года назад

    I love the Barwa chair at the beginning. Those are the best and I just picked up another one last weekend. Great video!

  • @james_robnett
    @james_robnett 2 года назад +22

    This sounds great and I have a porch I built with the same principle but it's kind of wrong. What you'll find is that it's great on Dec 22nd, the sun reaches across the room. And then you remember that you haven't actually hit winter yet and you watch rather sadly as January leads to February and the sun line is marching back across the floor and by early March it's still butt cold and you have almost no sunlight. 30 degrees would be a better angle than 24.5. You'll still block summer sun but you'll get better thermal gain from early November through March.

    • @MrNiceGuyMEGA08
      @MrNiceGuyMEGA08 2 года назад +3

      It's a complicated subject for sure with some nuance. Every place is unique. The thermal mass (floor) can carry the heat back through entropy whereby reducing the need for direct exposure. If you look closely, the floor has rugs which reduces the solar gain anyways, so there would have to be a significant amount of thermal mass. While your argument makes sense, it's hard to make a simple statement since we don't know so many factors. (Did they account for this limitation and oversize the thermal mass?) Anyway, it's a good observation, but be careful with assumptions is all I'm trying to say. (And your comment is a great solution to reduce the thermal mass, btw as long as the summer gain isn't too much in the hotter months. A balance that definitely needs consideration.)

    • @GeeCeeAte
      @GeeCeeAte 2 года назад +3

      Just input your house into 3D Studio Max. Add a sunlight. Then you can see exactly how the sun comes through your window at any time or day of the year. That’s how I designed my house.

    • @fleaniswerkhardt4647
      @fleaniswerkhardt4647 Год назад +1

      " . . . . . 30 degrees would be a better angle than 24.5" Isn't it entirely dependent on the latitude you're on?

    • @james_robnett
      @james_robnett Год назад

      @@fleaniswerkhardt4647 Yes and no, certainly the optimal angle depends on latitude but for anywhere in the northern hemisphere where you're calculating how much overhang is ok 30 degrees will provide more sunlight for more of the winter months while still ensuring complete shade in the summer months.

    • @fleaniswerkhardt4647
      @fleaniswerkhardt4647 Год назад

      @@james_robnett ok. I'm in the southern hemisphere so the same should apply?

  • @korratheaustralianshepherd5804
    @korratheaustralianshepherd5804 2 года назад +1

    love the classic take on House of the Rising Sun during the intro. Amazing architecture work too!

  • @itsokie4274
    @itsokie4274 2 года назад

    thank you!
    im 14 and i really like architecture and craftsmanship, i cannot tell you how much your videos make my day
    not to mention you elaborate efficiently!

  • @donovanreimer2324
    @donovanreimer2324 Год назад

    Such a neat video. So impressed in all ways.

  • @manuelka15
    @manuelka15 2 года назад +1

    Stewart, thanks for all this amazing content!

  • @bbbmw
    @bbbmw Год назад

    Our last house in Louisiana was designed very similarly. Thin single pane 50s windows and always super comfortable. Situated exactly to match the sun and shade itself in summer and get some heat in the winter. That house was absolutely brilliant.

  • @charpnatl
    @charpnatl Год назад

    It’s amazing that this house was Pre - Mid- Century! I really loved all the built in features and living zones. I’m curios about the roof and how it was designed to deal with snow loads. On a side note- your acting skills are impeccable I loved the opening reading act LOL!

  • @christophermoody1448
    @christophermoody1448 2 года назад +1

    Another great video! Thanks for sharing.

  • @JoshColletta
    @JoshColletta 2 года назад +4

    Those of us who grew up in South Florida are well familiar with The Barnacle, the oldest house in Miami-Dade County that is still in its original location (there are older homes, but they've been moved). It was built in 1891 by Ralph Munroe, one of the founders of Coconut Grove and the founder of the Biscayne Bay Yacht Club. Its property sits directly on Biscayne Bay, with a direct clearing through the canopy from the house to the water. It isn't exactly a "solar home" in the sense of what we're talking about here, but it's one of the earliest examples of modern passive cooling that I'm aware of. The main structure is almost exactly a square footprint, oriented northwest to southeast from front to back, with the front and both sides under significant shade. The sun doesn't directly come through the windows in the back, but anyone who has lived in Miami can tell you that doesn't matter. The roof is what really does all the cooling work. In addition to significantly large gable overhangs for shade, the roof structure is a pyramid with a covered vent at the top. That, combined with the seabreeze coming off the bay, pushed warm air up and out of the peak of the ceiling. Anyone who has taken the tour as a school kid (as I did) likely recalls the tour guide's explanation that a solid block of ice, which was used to provide drinking water and cooling for the ice box, would last several days in the central kitchen on the first floor, because it would remain cool enough in that location even in the peak of summer. A third-grade visit to The Barnacle Historic State Park is what got me interested in passive cooling (and heating) in home design, and while it may not be the most perfect method, it is certainly a fantastic example of some of the earliest modern attempts to stay comfortable by working the architecture around the environment.

    • @lk7195
      @lk7195 8 месяцев назад

      There's examples of vernacular architecture using those techniques and others across the south east. Many haven't survived but cracker houses, dog trot houses, shotgun houses for example all had passive cooling techniques.

  • @jimpeters3328
    @jimpeters3328 Год назад

    I’m currently designing a remodel to my home in the PNW and came across this wonderful video… thank you!!
    I want to lift half of my living room roof to create a shed roof with transome windows, high ceilings and a large 3 pane window facing SE to capture the winter sun deep into my living room while designing the overhang to shade from late spring on.
    This video really helps me to understand this geometry better and to know more about how effective it will be.
    Thx again!

  • @miltonwelch4177
    @miltonwelch4177 Год назад +1

    Good presentation. Thank you.

  • @kokenlor686
    @kokenlor686 Год назад

    Great video and beautifully spoken English. Thak you, good to listen and easy to understand!

  • @BuickDoc
    @BuickDoc 3 месяца назад

    I once owned such a home near Springfield, MO. A pleasant place to live...

  • @wenaadormeo9839
    @wenaadormeo9839 2 года назад

    Loving the design.. using the natural light, it gives mores elegant ..

  • @jppj2399
    @jppj2399 Год назад

    Thank you very much for this information. I hope you can feature more sample houses in the future.

  • @BodaciousWench
    @BodaciousWench Год назад

    My friend’s parents were into solar energy back in the 70’s and designed the old farmhouse kitchen with big windows to the south with a brick floor, and panels to put in the windows at night to keep the heat in.

  • @The_Smith
    @The_Smith 2 года назад +1

    Nice choice of music. A quick thanks for making these videos, very informative, and entertaining,

  • @bakamund
    @bakamund 2 года назад +2

    Real smart!
    I like how the sun angle is limited, so if you're standing upright you shouldn't get blinded by the sun directly shining into your eyes.

  • @tallend62
    @tallend62 2 года назад +3

    The intro music is "House of the Rising Sun", isn't it? A great song, and apt for this video!

  • @jamesmcgregor8314
    @jamesmcgregor8314 2 года назад +3

    A beautiful piece of architecture. What annoys me most is how easy these techniques are, how universally applied they can be to any piece of architecture or design and yet we are still producing these "cookie cutter" monster houses in these poorly designed neighbourhoods. I want to see a future where all houses are designed specifically to their vernacular, to the local environment. We have to stop thinking that a few solar panels (every house should have some) etc. on these poorly designed houses is the way forward. First we must address the issue of poor design.

  • @peteywheatstraws4909
    @peteywheatstraws4909 Год назад

    It actually reminds me of a lot of elementary schools built back in the 70's.
    Starting in the early 00's, we built a lot of additions on them things, most had this basic design.
    Mid Atlantic region of the coastal US, from Maryland down into the Carolinas.

  • @nickeverett
    @nickeverett 2 года назад +1

    8:42 reads like a moment out of The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou

  • @Brian-os9qj
    @Brian-os9qj Год назад

    Great interesting design aspects to consider. Thx man

  • @lamontejohn6244
    @lamontejohn6244 Год назад

    We have just a built a new home for our retirement. The house has a shed roof that slopes to the south where we have installed PV panels and our monthly power bill is $10, primality for administration at the power company. We are on the grid but feed the grid. The main living space utilizes large windows and the Living Room is essentially a greenhouse environment. It uses large overhangs for the summer sun and we NEVER feel uncomfortable in summer, and even in the harsh Idaho mountain winters, we seldom feel cold.

  • @akazod
    @akazod 2 года назад +1

    I live in a passive solar home and it's an amazing experience. I don't think I could ever live in a traditional home again.

  • @nicon9120
    @nicon9120 2 года назад +1

    I loved this video. These homes showcase what design is all about. As an Illinoisan Im definitely going to check out these spots.

  • @mwmayerle
    @mwmayerle Год назад

    I used to live in one of the Edgewater condo complexes with a completely unobstructed west view. Never ran the heat until around 6PM in the winter.

  • @gixellia8455
    @gixellia8455 Год назад

    Excellent. My type of house, coziness everywhere.
    Thank you.

  • @EmilAliev7
    @EmilAliev7 2 года назад +1

    Fantastic explanations. Thank you!

  • @stephenmoerlein8470
    @stephenmoerlein8470 Год назад +1

    Interesting explanation of solar engineering. Thanks for posting.

  • @michaelwells7348
    @michaelwells7348 Год назад

    I did a Report in College in 1992 about a House in Northern Maine which only used @ $20 worth of power a month, year round. It was called “ the Maine House “ and I found it in the pages of Fine Homebuilding Magazine ... I was so fascinated by it that I wanted to share it with the class.

  • @andrewdegozaru74
    @andrewdegozaru74 2 года назад

    Good vid. Thanks for the clear explanation.

  • @shesthebethest
    @shesthebethest 2 года назад +25

    I visited my family in a small village in Northern Greece in about 2003 and I was so surprised that one of the walls of my family's home was about 2ft thick while the others were more normal. It was probably the south facing wall that used the thermal mass to warm the house at night, right?

    • @stewarthicks
      @stewarthicks  2 года назад +4

      Probably!

    • @VanillaMacaron551
      @VanillaMacaron551 Год назад +1

      I'm not an architect but the winter sun flooding in to a room through large windows is just gorgeous and practical. The solar passive houses I know do not block the sun with a wall! Houses can be designed to absorb solar heat into the slab underneath, meaning you get the best of both worlds. Thick walls on the sunny side (south in the northern hemisphere, north in the southern hemisphere) seem like a travesty to me. Orient the house east-west and stick all the cupboards and solid walls on the cold side, and open it up to the sun on the sunny side!

    • @moiraf.2562
      @moiraf.2562 Год назад

      @@VanillaMacaron551 It was probably an older house where aesthetics played a minor role. could be that the original builders of the house had neither the materials nor the technical knowledge to place windows in that wall. You're forgetting that for a long time, windows weren't even covered with glass but with animal hides (in cold climates) or just left as open holes. Having a thick south facing wall would have protected the home from the summer heat. Apart from being more comfortable, that would have helped conserve food. And I suppose the wall would have acted as store for warmth when it was hit more directly by the winter sun.
      I find it really fascinating how people built their houses to protect them from the environment before they had the luxury of modern insulation and central heating. @Beth V: Do you know how old this house is? And it would be interesting to know if that is typical for the regional building style. You definitely have some new questions for your next visit :)

    • @iknowyouwanttofly
      @iknowyouwanttofly Год назад

      What? I thought the thickest wall should be to the north against the cold and big windows to the sun to get the most sun in?

    • @blcksu6011
      @blcksu6011 Год назад +2

      @@iknowyouwanttofly not in the very warm climate

  • @buzz_nut7547
    @buzz_nut7547 2 года назад +1

    This will be a helpful video.
    Thank you!

  • @zombieplague1266
    @zombieplague1266 2 года назад +1

    One of the houses that captured my imagination as a child was the Alfred A. Schiller House in Glen Ellyn, Illinois. I believe it was designed by Schweikher & Elting for Alfred Schiller. The house had so few windows on the outside, and yet full of glass on the inside surrounding a central atrium. The house was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2008, yet still some how got demolished and it broke my heart.

    • @sharksport01
      @sharksport01 Год назад

      Demolished to extend the backyard of a neighbors dutch colonial.