A Competition for Zero Net Energy

People / Places / June 5, 2012

Great design needs to be energy efficient too.

That’s the way Margie O’Driscoll, executive director of the American Institute of Architects San Francisco (AIASF) chapter, sees it.

So for the second consecutive year, AIASF and Pacific Gas and Electric are sponsoring a competition to explore the possibilities for zero net energy (ZNE) building designs.

ZNE buildings produce as much clean energy as they use during a year through a combination of designed energy efficiency and on-site, grid-tied renewable energy production.

“California has ambitious energy goals,” she says.  “By 2020, all new residential buildings have to be zero net energy, and by 2030 all new commercial building will have to be.”

AIASF’s competition is equally ambitious.  It’s focused on a new campus for nearby UC Merced, nestled at the foot of the Sierra Nevada Mountains.

“It’s an agrarian landscape in one of the most fertile areas in the world, surrounded by fields of cattle grazing,” she says.  “There’s already an ultra-modern, high tech campus there, and this competition is for Phase II.”

The competition, open to students and professionals alike, seeks ZNE designs for housing for 1,400 student beds, a recreation center, an aquatic center, a dining facility, an administrative building and basketball courts.

Entries will be juried by Bob Berkebile, Principal, BNIM Architects; Ed Mazria, Founder, Architecture 2030; Alison Kwok, Professor, University of Oregon; and Stephen Selkowitz, Program Head, Building Technologies Department, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.

Open through Oct. 1, the competition carries a $25,000 prize, to be distributed as the jury sees fit.  Winners will be announced on Oct. 24.

Last year’s competition fielded 17 entries, but O’Driscoll anticipates as many as 100 this year.

To enter, go to http://architectureatzero.com/

View Images:


Tags: ,



Mike Welton




Previous Post

In Tacoma, a Museum on the Water

Next Post

Urban Furniture to Create a Space





You might also like



2 Comments

on September 1, 2012

It does fit in with Australian the academic calendar. Though I am unsure as to how many applicants from Au. you would receive.

on June 6, 2012

If AIASF is truly interested in student participation, then the schedule should be tied to the semester and quarter academic calendars. A December deadline would give faculty maximum flexibility. As it stands, students would have to fit this into the first four to six weeks of the semester in order to participate. I’m so tired of reading about really interesting competitions that claim to be interested in student participation, but do little to accommodate.



Leave a Reply


More Story

In Tacoma, a Museum on the Water

This place and its structures are of another time. When Tacoma’s original waterfront warehouses – known as the Balfour...

June 4, 2012