Passivhaus, or Passive House as it is known in North America, is a building concept where there are strict limits on the amount of energy that can be used per unit of area, and also hard limits on air infiltration. It is a data driven concept, and some have complained that their designers care more about data than beauty. One critic wrote:
In response to that statement I present Tigh na Croit, a house in the Scottish Highlands that is most definitely comfortable, full of light and grand, and which certainly does not fail the occupants. In fact, as you can see in Ben Adam-Smith’s video, they are quite pleased.
© HLM Architects
It just won the Rural Category in the Passivhaus awards, run by Britain’s Passivhaus Trust, which have three objectives, which talk a lot more about beauty than BTUs:
- To celebrate that small Passivhaus buildings can be comfortable, healthy and beautifully designed.To demonstrate that the Passivhaus standard can be applied using any type of system or material.To raise the profile and encourage uptake of the Passivhaus standard within the custom & self-build market.
HLM architects describe it:
In fact, given the climate in the Highlands, I am surprised at how big those windows are. And skylights too! It is heated with an air source heat pump and a wood burning stove and in the bathrooms and en-suite, those electric towel bars do the job.
And the next time somebody complains to me that PassivHaus designs are boring and boxy and not very beautiful, I will just show them these photos of this data-driven obsession with BTUs.