Minimum-Impact-House is a holistic approach for the reduction of the overall-impact of residential housing by creating a new type of residential house by densifying the city centre. In the design project, a prototype mini-house has been developed to explore the potential of so far uninhabitable urban niches. A triangular site of only 29sqm was chosen to build a mini-house in size comparable to a family house of 150sqm. This strategy avoids the further use of land and the need of building of new infrastructure like streets and public buildings. The city centre is a denser environment so that the inhabitants won’t have to travel so often to work, shopping, education, or cultural events.
In a research project the prototype was compared to a typical suburban house. A life-cycle-analysis quantified the amounts of energy, material, and investment for the construction, and consumed during an estimated life-span of the buildings of 50 years. The analysis, for which software had been developed, was also used as a design-tool for optimizing the prototype-building in terms of energy-consumption, construction, and materials. For the building construction, renewable resources, mainly timber, were used which reduces the energy content and emissions.
project period | Aug 04 2004 - Apr 04 2008 |
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use | Residential |
address | Walter-Kolb-Strasse 22, Frankfurt am Main |
floor area | 220 m² |
building volume | 660 m³ |
budget | 280,000 EUR |
commission | Direct Comission |
project team: | Eva Zellmann |
project status: | built work |
Leistungsphasen: | Building Permit, Preparing to Build, Buidling Supervision |