Ankeny Row is an environmentally-friendly, socially engaging cohousing community in Portland, Oregon with five townhomes, a loft apartment and a community hall surrounding a central courtyard. A Passive House development with a net-zero energy goal, the buildings use an airtight super-insulated building envelope, innovative heat recovery ventilation and passive solar strategies to sharply reduce energy demand. Extended 48” deep eaves that shade the large south facing windows on the topmost floor, and a combustible material wood deck were approved after two successful code appeals, by including fire sprinkler protection.
Kitchen Exhaust Ventilation with HRV at Ankeny Row
Green Hammer’s Ankeny Row homes meet the Passive House Standard with whole-house, balanced, continuous ventilation with heat recovery. This ventilation system includes an exhaust vent located in the kitchen. Code requires a direct-through-envelope, intermittent operation, high-volume range hood exhaust system. On appeal, Green Hammer demonstrated the passive house ventilation system is environmentally superior because it provides more ventilation than the code requires as well as heat recovery for greater energy efficiency. The City of Portland allowed this ventilation system as “an alternate method/material.”
Sanden CO2 Refrigerant Heat Pump Water Heater at FutureFit Home
Residential heat pump domestic water heating systems (HPDWH) use synthetic refrigerants with high global warming potential (GWP). In the 1990s, Japanese engineers developed an alternative HPDWH technology known as “Eco-Cute” that uses CO2 for refrigerant, a naturally occurring gas with global warming potential (GWP) 2,000 times less than synthetic. Oregon’s plumbing code requires hot water heating systems to be tested and listed by an approved agency (such as Underwriters Laboratories UL). Although it is not yet UL listed, the City of Portland allowed us to install the CO2 HPDHW system as an alternate material through its Alternative Technology Advisory Committee process.