Terri Meyer
Boake B.E.S. B.Arch. M.Arch. Associate
Professor School of Architecture University of Waterloo
Case
Studies in Canadian Sustainable Design:
Image Gallery:
CMHC
Healthy House
Martin
Liefhebber Architect
Toronto,
Ontario
About the building:
In June 1991, CMHC announced
its Healthy Housing Design Competition. The objective was to demonstrate to
the public and the housing industry that it is now possible to design houses
for the Canadian climate that are in keeping with the principles of sustainable
development and are healthy for the occupants. The competition challenged the
industry to develop innovative ways to design homes with the right balance of
occupant health, energy efficiency, resource efficiency, environmental responsibility
and affordability. In February 1992, an independent jury selected two winners,
one in Vancouver and one in Toronto. The Toronto winning entry is a 1,700 square
foot semi-detached house on a vacant (infill) lot in an older part of the city
known as Riverdale.
Closer
view of front of house. Upper balcony opens onto the bedroom. The lower
balcony opens onto the kitchen/dining area.
Close
up view of PV screen suspended from balcony railing.
View
of light scoop along side of building that takes light into the lower
bermed areas towards the back of the house.
View
of rear of house as it back onto the neighbouring yard to the north. Only
the top floors have light access from the rear of the building.
Interior
showing living room at back.
View out
from dining area at south towards the street.
Views of
the kitchen (left) and bedroom (right).
Detail of
parallam construction and steel pan floors topped with concrete to provide
for thermal storage.
A view of
the PV array that forms a privacy screen at the top/master bedroom floor
of the house.
Oblique view
of the connections at the back of this uppermost array. The height of
the array (over 3 floors up) required a special contract for cleaning.
View down
from top master bedroom balcony onto small front yard below. The yard
was used as the terminal stage in the Waterloo Biofilter cleansing system.
Shot of the
Waterloo Biofilter unit in a closet on the ground floor of the building.
Most of the ground floor was used in battery storage and biofilter. Some
of the biofilter storage tanks were located under the floor of the small
office at the front of the building.
The images on this site have been taken for use
in my teaching. They may be copied for educational purposes. Please give credit.
These images may not be reproduced commercially without written consent.