WonderWindow
Windows are the weakest link in the building envelope, responsible for $25 Billion in annual US energy expenditures. They are radiators of cold in the winter and bring blazing solar heat in summer, causing thermostats to be adjusted to use more energy to maintain thermal comfort than any other element of the building envelope. At the same time, low density housing in the US, with its high surface area-to-volume, and high transportation expenditures, contribute heavily to the nation's carbon footprint.
The American Institute of Architects recognizes that there is no way to avoid the worst ravages of climate change without making Near and Net Zero Energy (and Regenerative) homes and buildings the universal norm. To that aim, firms responsible for over 80% of the built environment have signed onto the 2030 Challenge, requiring architects to be routinely producing Net Zero Energy buildings by 2030. However, the IPCC's most recent report on climate change indicates that the rate of warming, and the ravages produced, are accelerating & worse than originally thought. In other words, we don't have until 2030 to start producing Net Zero Energy homes and buildings at scale. We need to get there NOW.
A few leading national firms are producing NZE buildings, but typically at high budgets of $300-500/sf. Most of the other firms have signed onto the 2030 Challenge as a worthy aspiration, but with insufficient knowledge & tools to routinely produce NZE homes and buildings affordably. Those that valiantly attempt to build in energy-efficiency and rooftop solar often see these elements 'value-engineered' out of their projects before construction starts.
California and New York City have mandated Near and Net Zero Energy construction, but the result is adding cost that makes homes less affordable. Homeownership as the bedrock of 'the American Dream' (and economic security and wealth creation) is increasing out-of-reach for coming generations, increasing divisions in society between 'haves' and 'have-nots'.
An energy-efficient window is not going to solve EVERY problem of social inequity, or every aspect of climate change, but it can become the basis for affordable Net Zero Energy homes and buildings in carbon-sequestering wood frame construction up to 4-1/2 stories, that produces walkable neighborhoods less dependent on high carbon footprint transportation....and assist taller mass timber multifamily buildings in denser urban centers in the move to NZE performance.
WonderWindows are multi-pane acrylic windows that develop R7 to R9 thermal resistance with seasonal solar control. They provide twice the thermal resistance (and comfort) as state-of-the-art low-e argon-filled double pane. They develop their thermal resistance by adding up multiple insulating airspaces in an easy to assemble and easy to install package. These patented windows are designed to be made safely by Living Wage makers with modest hand skills, assembled from pre-cut acrylic parts using high bond tapes cut with a scissors, and a brushed-on waterproof siliconized latex low-VOC edge seal.
Integrating with 24" on-center framing, they safely eliminate headers, jack and cripples studs. Framing factors, the percentage of the wall occupied by low thermal resistance framing, goes from 24% of wall area documented for typical 16" on-center construction, to only 9% of wall area.
By looking at the architectural bay of the window and the wall around it as a 'finite element' of the building envelope, and getting that finite element right from a cost and energy standpoint, the approach has been shown to deliver a 230% improvement to whole wall thermal resistance without ADDED COST in many if not most cases. A written paper is expected to be given on this approach to the ASHRAE/ORNL BUILDINGS Conference in December.
The window + wall combination makes for affordable Near and Net Zero Energy construction, particularly adaptable to the townhomes and multifamily housing that can reduce life's transportation carbon footprint.
The ultimate beneficiaries are the home owners and renters that get to live in quality housing with low carbon footprint, BY DESIGN. However, the business is B2B2C, understanding that architects and builders are the decision-making customers and must be 'sold' on the approach.
When a 6' wide bay that is 9' tall requires 8 pieces of lumber to build instead of 22 pieces, as is current practice, there is an opportunity to create an 'aha' moment that will attract early adopters searching for supply chain solutions, housing cost and affordability solutions, and/or Net Zero Energy solutions.
Those early evangelists help support and grow the business until it becomes an attractive 'bandwagon' for many to jump on.
Most importantly, the solution attracts those who want to make the lives of disadvantaged youth in their communities better by providing them Living Wage jobs assembling these windows. The Makers Workshop also includes Friday Lunch 'N' Learn sessions on a variety of STEAM and entrepreneurial topics that aspire to improve life trajectories for these young makers.
The 10 year bottoms up financial projections show a triple bottom line set of benefits:
PEOPLE: 10,000 makers from disadvantaged backgrounds with improved life outcomes every year
PLANET: Over a million Net Zero Energy homes and buildings produced with several hundred thousand NZE homes added annually
PROFIT: $1.6 Billion revenue yielding over a half billion in Net Operating Income
The CEO has designed, financed, built and sold $75 million of 1-4 story wood-frame housing and mixed use buildings, including affordable housing, building a 32 person team that kept 200 subcontractors in work. The firm won the NAHB Green Multi-family Building of the Year Award in 2008 for an 84,000sf Near Zero Energy building before the Great Recession forced the firm to close.
The firm developed a Green Template for such buildings, based on 14 foot spans between bearing walls was partly inspired by the Framework + Infill work of NJ Habraken, former Head of Architecture at MIT. The current work based on 24" on-center framing efficiencies and high performance windows that fit that framing builds upon this foundation, understanding that buildings get built ONLY because someone is willing to pay for them.
In other words, first cost matters. The approach presented is believed to be able to compete on the basis of first cost if given a chance.
The CEO has been an AIA Approved Provider of Continuing Education, and has taught Net Zero Energy Building Design to the Boston Society of Architects and Saudi Aramco engineers and architects. He has been an active member of AIA and NAHB Chapters, and knows how risk adverse the construction industry is, and how change is typically slow. However, he has the drive, energy, and knowledge to overcome that inertia, understanding it's a marathon more than a sprint.
The strategic partnership forged with the Boys and Girls Club of the Gulf Coast is particularly unique and important. Executive Director Keva Scott has worked in the national office of the Club, which provides experience that will be particularly important in scaling this effort to other locations. The local Club has a Maker's Space, with a single 3D printer and a bunch of computers, but not so much Maker activity. The Clubs also have underutilized real estate, not so active until schools is out. Finally, the Clubs have a small intern program for older teens and young adults, but not much funding to scale it.
The strategic partnership benefits both partners. The Club meets its Work Force Development and STEM education Work Force Readiness goals, scales the intern program, and serves its disadvantaged community with Living Wage income opportunities that change life outcomes. The Company benefits by outsourcing the Human Resources and payroll accounting functions to the Club, which has long-term experience, and benefits from low-overhead facilities that allow growth and scaling.
- Enable mass production of inexpensive and low-carbon housing, including changes to design, materials, and construction methods.
- Pilot
We need small demonstration buildings to pilot our approach & prove its cost-effectiveness in building Near and Net Zero Energy single and multi-family homes, quickly building up in scale. Cold climate locations like Massachusetts, New England, New York, and Colorado are especially of interest. California is another important early adopter market.
In addition, we want to expand our Makers Workshop model, pioneered with the Boys and girls Club of the Gulf Coast, to these same locations, saving an average of over 1000 miles of truck delivery transportation for every building built compared to traditional window manufacturers.
Our outreach to architects and builders requires excellence in You Tube videos that introduce the windows and 24" on-center approach, and placing small sample windows in their hands made in the Makers Workshops, so that they can share these with their clients and colleagues to build a pipeline of projects that sustain the operation paying Living Wages (per the MIT Living Wage calculator) to disadvantaged youth.
- Product / Service Distribution (e.g. expanding client base)