I’M NOT JUST A PRETTY FACE – ENERGY RETURNS ON SUSTAINABLE BUILDING FAÇADE MATERIALS

The facade of a building is often perceived as merely the aesthetic frontage of a building, but it’s the performance of a façade that has become critical in a world turning sustainable.  A façade today cannot afford to be just a pretty face.

Building new, renovating or retrofitting, there is a strong case for using an effective building façade material and system to enclose a building. Especially a material that is naturally and sensibly sourced. One that provides good returns for the environment in terms of energy savings, longevity, low maintenance and also in terms of overall benefits, including human health, comfort and safety.

Moving beyond conventional high impact façade materials of aluminium, concrete and particularly glass in curtain wall systems that have dominated the façade landscape in recent decades, we take a deeper look at clay based systems that in very clever ways are elevating sustainable building design and performance.

So what is a sustainable façade? 

Modern façade engineering and façade product design resolves environmental and structural issues to produce effective building enclosures and the Ecospecifier Global Verified product Terraçade™ is a good example of this.  Consisting of modular fired clay units, the product is a terracotta rain screen and ventilated façade system made largely from natural clays sourced in Australia and China.  Although the core material, for instance, is not a renewable resource, it is considered to be abundant.  However, it is how the material functions in relation to the overall façade system that makes the product a good sustainable choice.

The Terraçade product was put through the Ecospecifier Verification program to qualify its leading position as a façade system that is worthy to be used in green building projects.

Results found that the two variations of the product: Terraçade TN (designed to act as a rainscreen and a rear ventilated façade system) and Terraçade XP (designed to act as a rear ventilated curtain wall system) both contribute to improving a building’s overall performance and energy rating.

How does a sustainable façade system actually work?

Discovering how a sustainable façade system functions is helpful to validate making a choice between one system over another – and how it can work in multiple ways as an integrated system to produce sustainable outcomes,  helps designers to understand how best to use it.

The Terraçade tile, for example, acts as a rain screen and the framing system it sits within is designed to assist thermal comfort as well.  It cleverly provides natural ventilation for a building that expels absorbed heat and reduces re-radiation.  This is a significant benefit as compared with significant radiant heat gain issues that can be experienced in glazed panel systems or curtain wall glass façade systems, especially with ‘heat absorbing’ dark coloured glasses typically used.

In contrast, the frame of a Terraçade system offsets the terra-cotta skin from the building surface and assists in reducing energy use throughout a building by promoting air flow against the substrate wall – and the boost of airflow helps to regulate a building’s temperature and remove airborne moisture from within the cavity.

Simultaneously, the addition of a polypropylene membrane facilitates the escape of vapour from within a façade frame and restricts the entry of rain and moisture, which can rot a timber framing and create mould.  Also, joint sealants, which are used in glass systems, are not necessary either to weatherproof, which represents other savings in costs for sealant materials and labour.

The diagram below illustrates the working benefits of  the Terraçade system.

terracade-benefits

Why do façade systems also need to be safe?

While the majority of materials used in a sustainable façade system like Terraçade do need to be strong, highly durable, low maintenance, re-usable or recyclable (Terraçade also offers a take back scheme) the issue of safety is also a critical consideration to look for in product design.

For instance, the making of a material like terracotta units as used in Terraçade involves only firing of natural clays, which while they do contain crystalline silica, is a common material also in all bricks, concrete, glass and many stones etc. However,  no hazardous VOCs or substances are derived or emitted in the life of the product’s use.

It is also critical to know that a façade material is fit for purpose and contributes to overall building safety. Indeed any materials used to envelope a building must be safe in terms of structural integrity and safety.  It is therefore important to check that façade materials working together provide up-to-date and valid certification for factors of resistance to cyclonic winds and rain. Terraçade provides this as well as compliance for more serious issues.

Fire issues are perhaps of the greatest concern and a serious safety issue to consider when making sure that your façade material is certified (‘low’ in terms of combustibility).   As authorities have established, the use of subpar, cheaper and non-certified exterior building products have caused great damage during building fires – such as the one that devastated the Lacrosse Apartment complex in Melbourne in 2014 and others in Dubai as well.  At the official enquiry into the Lacrosse fire, the Victorian Building Authority concluded that the use of the cladding material failed to comply with combustibility requirements and played an instrumental role in the spread of the blaze.

The future of façades

Building safety and sustainability are logically bound together and façade materials and design will continue to play a vital role – both for greater reductions in building energy use and in terms of human and environmental health.  Globally, there is a positive growth of demand for green designed buildings and contrary to perception, according to the Living LOHAS 2015 report by Mobium Group, the cost of a product is not the only driver.

Consumers are increasingly choosing products for their health and wellness benefits and this same trend, according to another study recently, is occurring in Australia’s corporate rental market as well.  Decisions are being made based upon verified or certified sustainable standards in building materials and building design to ensure healthier and more environmentally conscious living and working environments.

Soon, it would seem, all building products, including façade systems, will not get away with just looking pretty.   Eventually, all will come under greater scrutiny and some already are.

Banner Picture: Annette Kellerman Pool in Sydney wearing Terraçade XP Pilabara

Explore more about the product ranges that have been verified and eco-certified and listed by Ecospecifier, by using the Product Search Engine on Ecospecifier Global: http://www.ecospecifier.com.au

Join us in more conversations about green products and sustainability issues on our social media pages:

Follow Ecospecifier on Facebook

Follow Ecospecifier on Twitter

Follow Ecospecifier on LinkedIn

Sign up for our newsletter to discover our latest green product listings SIGN UP HERE

Climate Sensitive Glass Choice

Choosing the best glass for your needs

Glass is omnipresent in modern homes. Much of the success of our homes depend on the correct selection of glass to keep our families comfortable and safe. Here is a brief summary of what glass to choose in your home or renovations.

Safety Glass

Anywhere there is risk of impact onto glass, safety glass must be used. There are two main types of safety glass; laminated, toughened and wired. Laminated glass is the most popular type, consisting of an interlayer of flexible plastic sandwiched between two panels or ordinary glass. The interlayer strengthens the glass, aiding for example in providing safety from flying debris in storms. It also helps in protecting homes from attempted burglaries, as it will not break as easily as standard glass, thus deterring potential intruders. Toughened glass is heat treated so as not to break into sharp shards, it ‘crumbs’. Once manufactured it cannot be cut and has to be made to size. All glass handrails and structural glass is toughened glass.

Climate Sensitive Glass Choice

Single pane glass is almost completely transparent to heat and cold, pretty much just keeping out the breezes. So to make a house more comfortable focus on the type of glass in the windows (after insulating the roof and walls properly) is the next best use of your money. The design and placement of glass in specific areas of the building can be used to improve energy efficiency by using it to take advantage of natural light. For example, it is common to see more glass located along on Northern elevations to capture the winter warming sun rays and keep summer heat out more easily with simple eaves overhangs. .

In warmer climates, toned glass can be used to minimize solar heat gain and help control glare. Toned Glass intercepts energy from the sun and converts this to heat, a portion of which is released to the outside, but some still enters the building. The darker the tone, the less light it will allow in to the building.

Reducing heat loss can also be achieved by using various types of glass. For example, double glazing has two panels of glass separated by an air space, with the air space acting as an insulator against heat loss or heat gain. Very high efficiency double glazing often has an inert gas fill in the cavity as well such as argon. Double glazed windows provide meaningful thermal benefits in virtually all Australian climate zones, especially when you want larger areas of glass than are permitted under the singled glazing requirements within the National Construction Code and the NatHERS home rating scheme. Double glazing can be retrofitted with some difficulty, or it can be easily fitted using a specially designed a retro-fitting system like Magnetite.

Danpalon polycarbonate glazing as an alternative to glass, is a translucent or transparent multi-glazed system with good thermal insulation, water tightness and impact resistant while blocking UV radiation.

‘Low E’ glass is modified single pane glass that has a molecule thin, transparent metal coating applied to the glass surface that can be used by itself to improve heat loss of a single pane system or in double glazing to increase its efficiency even further. Low E glass is most useful in cold climates.

Click here, to see the list of Glass and related products on Ecospecifier website.

Explore more about the product ranges that have been eco-certified and listed by Ecospecifier, by using the Product Search Engine on Ecospecifier Global: http://www.ecospecifier.com.au

Join us in more conversations about green products and sustainability issues on our social media pages:

Follow Ecospecifier on Facebook

Follow Ecospecifier on Twitter

Follow Ecospecifier on LinkedIn

Join our Social Media Honour Roll – support the switch to green products

Like, Comment and Share our blogs and posts on your social media pages … and we will send your name out to more than 15,000 subscribers via our monthly Ecospecifier Global Newsletter.

See which stellar individuals, businesses and networks made the latest Honour Roll on Twitter and Facebook HERE We salute you in helping us educate and help more people #MaketheSwitch to #EcoResponsible products.

Green walls – more than just painted green.

As the call for action increases to address man-made climate change, one might think ‘what can I do’? There are at least four walls to each house, it may not immediately come to mind, but these walls can be perfect support for living ‘green walls’.

Green walls are landscaped surfaces partially or completely covered with a variety of vegetation that typically include plants, growing media and a water/fertiliser delivery system.

Research has shown that green walls can reduce energy requirements (both heating costs in the winter and cooling costs in the summer); improve air quality (whether inside or out) and increase property and amenity values. These are a few of the benefits of green walls; for an extensive overview of the benefits of indoor plants, click here.

Although traditionally Australia has trailed behind other countries (e.g. Canada, Germany and the U.S.A.) we have vast potential and now some of the world’s largest examples of commercial green walls and an explosion of home-based green wall installations.

Due to the unique demands place upon the vegetation used in green walls, low growing succulents and drought tolerant perennials are often used; this includes many Australian plants. It may seem intimidating when considering a fundamentally different style of wall than you have had previously, however a good start is with Ecospecifier.com.au’s rich and extensive database of sustainable, ‘green’ products; this includes green wall components, installers and much more.

Elmich – Green Roofs & Wall systems is a perfect example of what Ecospecifier has to offer. This product is an effective green roofing and wall system that has been proven to have multiple benefits such as reduced water run-off, reduce demand on cooling and improved air quality.

Whilst there are disadvantages of green walls (primarily the expense and level of maintenance required); green products are the way of the future. They may seem intimidating and mysterious at first, but with Ecospecifier even the greyest areas of understanding can be explained. Green products are the way of the future and what better way to become green than with green walls!

Explore more about the product ranges that have been eco-certified and listed by Ecospecifier, by using the Product Search Engine on Ecospecifier Global: http://www.ecospecifier.com.au

 Join us in more conversations about green products and sustainability issues on our social media pages:

Follow Ecospecifier on Facebook

Follow Ecospecifier on Twitter

Follow Ecospecifier on LinkedIn

Join our Social Media Honour Roll – support the switch to green products

Like, Comment and Share our blogs and posts on your social media pages … and we will send your name out to more than 15,000 subscribers via our monthly Ecospecifier Global Newsletter.

See which stellar individuals, businesses and networks made the latest Honour Roll on Twitter and Facebook HERE We salute you in helping us educate and help more people #MaketheSwitch to #EcoResponsible products.

The health benefits of correct lighting

The quality of light affects people in many different ways. Studies have shown that appropriate lighting layouts can increase the attractiveness of homes, correct room lighting can sometimes make the difference between happiness and sadness and correct lighting is needed to do anything past sunset without creating health impacts of some sort.

Lighting is also the third largest generator of greenhouse gas emissions in the home so has an impact on our personal ‘climate change’ impact. Given that we all know how important that we take action on climate change immediately, this is at least one factor that you can have immediate impact on. So…with such an important issue as lighting, how do you decide on the type of lighting most suited for you and best for your family and the planet?

Fortunately Ecospecifier.com.au has an extensive range of products that are all verified or certified against sustainability standards so next time you are shopping, think Ecospecifier and explore through our listings of green products and technologies.

The hardest step is always the first step, so let’s make this step towards sustainability a little one and begin with lighting.

The traditional incandescent light bulb used to be the typical light bulb in any given home environment, but was basically banned some years ago by the federal government. However fancy and coloured bulbs are typically still incandescent and today more ‘efficient’ versions have been created, but they are still poor by comparison to other types. These light bulbs use a large amount of energy required for its operation due to its inefficient nature and relatively short lifespan (only up to 1000 hours), they can also be dangerous as the temperatures on the bulb can reach in excess of 140 degrees Celsius!

Therefore, there are several benefits to completely eliminating the use of incandescent and tungsten light bulbs in your home. Foremost is the direct financial savings in your power bills; you will also be doing your part in reducing the effect of manmade climate change and reducing the emission of serious toxics like mercury that are emitted alongside the carbon dioxide when coal is burnt.

Today there are many highly efficient lamp alternatives that are equivalent in light output to all conventional lighting types, including ‘low voltage’ tungsten lamps. Do note, however, that ‘low voltage’ does not equate to energy efficient – these lamps are almost as bad as incandescent and usually there are a lot more used in any given area.

Fluorescents and compact fluorescents are now relatively cheap and energy efficient, but come with a toxic load of mercury in every one. Please note that broken fluorescent tubes or bulbs can emit a mercury containing toxic powder and formally all fluorescent lamps must be either recycled at the Council depot or disposed of in a hazardous waste dump, with terrible consequences for the environment.

However examples of clean, highly efficient new Light Emitting Diode (LED) light technology are easily found and can be seen in ‘View Lights’ –LED Down lights and ‘Bright Green’ D900 Cube and other super efficient LED lamps and fittings (listed on Ecospecifier.com.au). View Lights are an energy efficient LED down light, and perfectly suited for residential applications.

Consuming significantly less energy than halogen or incandescent lighting, LED lighting contains no mercury and also produces significantly less heat than comparable lighting systems to have an overall efficient green lighting scheme for any home.

Current third generation LED Lighting has come far from earlier LED technology – that meant consumers once had to choose between an effective light and a ‘green’ light. Fortunately, this is no longer the case if you choose wisely. Choosing green no longer results in low quality lighting and indeed brings many benefits. There is really no excuse to delay any longer and converting to these wiser and greener choices. They are a little more expensive, but the energy pay back is worth is, as they last 50 -100 times longer than any other form of bulb (50-100,000 hours).

Explore more about the product ranges that have been eco-certified and listed by Ecospecifier, by using the Product Search Engine on Ecospecifier Global: http://www.ecospecifier.com.au

Join us in more conversations about green products and sustainability issues on our social media pages:

Follow Ecospecifier on Facebook

Follow Ecospecifier on Twitter

Follow Ecospecifier on LinkedIn

Join our Social Media Honour Roll – support the switch to green products

Like, Comment and Share our blogs and posts on your social media pages … and we will send your name out to more than 15,000 subscribers via our monthly Ecospecifier Global Newsletter.

See which stellar individuals, businesses and networks made the latest Honour Roll on Twitter and Facebook HERE We salute you in helping us educate and help more people #MaketheSwitch to #EcoResponsible products.

green covered roofs

What Are Green Roofs?

A green roof or otherwise known as a living roof is a roof of a building that is partially or completely covered with vegetation and a growing medium, planted over a waterproof membrane. Green roofs often also include a root barrier layer, drainage layer and, where the climate necessitates, an irrigation system. They have multiple environmental benefits at a variety of scales. Benefits for individual buildings include increased roof life, insulating properties that lead to greater energy efficiency through reduced summer cooling and winter heating costs and attenuation of inside and outside noise levels.

Green roofs have two different categorisation; intensive and extensive. Intensive, with deep growing medium, irrigation, grasses, shrubs, trees, and on slopes less than 3%, traditionally support 50 to 120 kg/m2 of vegetation. Labelled intensive as this category of green roofing is labour-intensive, requiring feeding and other up keep maintenance; these are commonly used for easy access and may include such vegetation as kitchen herbs.

Extensive, with less than 300mm depth of growing medium, minimal irrigation with hardy, low growing plants and ground cover species, with slopes up to 30% and usually support 390 to 730 kg/m2 of soil/media and vegetation. Extensive green roofs, by contrast, are designed to be virtually self-sustaining and should require only a minimum of maintenance, perhaps a once-yearly weeding or an application of slow-release fertiliser to boost growth. Extensive roofs are usually only accessed for maintenance and are typically 750-1500kg/m2 depending on soil thickness and type.

Plant selection was more important than other choices for green roof profile structure. It is common to use native species because of their real and perceived benefits, such as their longevity without the use of pesticides, fertilizers, or irrigation. While plants could not actually be native to rooftops, many plant species have evolved in extreme environments and are adapted to green roof conditions. However, native species are not necessarily more successful on green roofs than non-native species.

Explore more about the product ranges that have been eco-certified and listed by Ecospecifier, by using the Product Search Engine on Ecospecifier Global: http://www.ecospecifier.com.au

Join us in more conversations about green products and sustainability issues on our social media pages:

Follow Ecospecifier on Facebook

Follow Ecospecifier on Twitter

Follow Ecospecifier on LinkedIn

Traditional Norweigen grass roof house - photo by Kjetil Bjørnsrud

Join our Social Media Honour Roll – support the switch to green products

Like, Comment and Share our blogs and posts on your social media pages … and we will send your name out to more than 15,000 subscribers via our monthly Ecospecifier Global Newsletter.

See which stellar individuals, businesses and networks made the latest Honour Roll on Twitter and Facebook HERE We salute you in helping us educate and help more people #MaketheSwitch to #EcoResponsible products.