Unit 6 leverages emerging energy-efficient technologies with a chic architectural design to create a multi-family dwelling that's both unique and approachable. This unit is one of six in the team's proposed structure and aims to serve as a sought-after alternative to its less-responsible urban counterparts. Our hope is that Unit 6 is a flashpoint for low carbon, solar powered housing in the Hampton Roads region.
The Unit 6 construction is booming. Since its arrival in May, the house continues to undergo much change as the members of Team Tidewater Virginia work hard to finish their house.
It was a big two days for all of us when the windows of the Unit 6; all but the famous motorized one were delivered and installed. Each window is capable of opening in three different directions, tilting forwards, backwards, and swinging inward, satisfying whatever preference a homeowner would have. It is incredible how they've improved the amount of light and airflow since being installed. Working inside the Unit 6 is much more pleasant, even in Virginia's July heat.
The windows and doors have added significant progress to the appearance of the house, which is now beginning to resemble a comfortable net-zero solar home more and more.
Site...check. Foundation...check. House...nearly here.
Our team members have been working diligently this week, preparing the foundation of the Unit 6. The house is scheduled to arrive Wednesday, May 18, next week (postponed one day from its original set date, Tuesday). Stepping back from the house's designs, Engineering and Architecture students are now pouring sweat and muscle into their work–digging into the dirt, shoveling rock, and setting the concrete blocks.
Next to the site, kids at the ODU Child Development Center clung to the fence as the digger carried and dumped loads of rock into the foundation work. They seemed in awe, watching the big piece of machinery; many would run from the fence to play with their toy dump trucks in the sand and dirt.
Structural Engineering student, John Perdue, has been leading the site's construction, doing much of the grunt work and managing the rest of the team as they prepare for the arrival of the Unit 6.
The modules of Team Tidewater Virginia's house, the Unit 6 Unplugged, is delivered to Old Dominion University. Our team members will spend the rest of the summer adding the finishing touches and testing the functionality of the house before disassembling it and shipping it to D.C. for the U.S. Department of Energy Solar Decathlon 2011.
In May, the modules of the Unit 6 were delivered and assembled on campus at Old Dominion University. Since then, the members of Team Tidewater Virginia have been working every day on the construction of the house. At the end of August, the completed house, will be disassembled and transported up to Washington D.C., where it will be displayed on the National Mall along with the other 19 houses in the U.S. Department of Energy Solar Decathlon 2011.
The modules of the Unit 6 are currently scheduled to be delivered May 17.
Upon reception, the students of Team Tidewater Virginia will assemble the house, working out the kinks and adding the final touches. We hope to show off the house to members of the local community once it is completed, giving tours to a few of our supporters before it can be seen on an international level.
The Unit 6 will remain at Old Dominion University throughout the summer until it is disassembled and transported up to Washington D.C. for the U.S. Department of Energy Solar Decathlon (September 23 - October 2).
The construction site for the house is currently located off of Powhatan Avenue, between 48th and 49th street next to the Child Care Center at ODU.Come out and see!
A look into the different factors that influenced the design of the Unit 6–a net zero solar house entered into the Solar Decathlon 2011. Team Tidewater Virginia is designing and building the Unit 6, which will be displayed on the National Mall along with the other 19 teams' designs in the competition.
Our net zero solar house, the Unit 6, is taller than it used to be–currently about 6 inches in height. Members of Team Tidewater began pouring concrete for the foundation blocks of the house on Friday, marking the first traces of its physical existence.
Some had a little construction experience; others had none. Whatever the case, team members of all specialties pitched in and got dirty, shoveling, packing, and scraping cement.
The cement will take about a month to fully set, after which, the team will assemble and finish the modules of the Unit 6 in April.
It's current site is 48th Street and Powhatan Avenue on Old Dominion University's campus; however the team is trying to move to a site on Hampton Blvd, which many in Norfolk know is a four-lane and often busy road running through ODU's campus. If successful, the move would allow more passing commuters to see the Unit 6 during its construction. Whatever the case, the house will live on one of these two sites until it is disassembled and transported up to Washington D.C. in August.
Team Tidewater Members Jim Novak and Holly Anne Hillard spoke Tuesday to a group of young students at Kids Engineering Unplugged 2011. Both Novak and Hillard are civil engineering students at Old Dominion University.
Part of Engineering Unplugged, an annual conference sponsored by the Old Dominion University Business Gateway, Kids Engineering Unplugged was created as a way to involve both engineers and their kids and to teach them about the excitement of environmental engineering.
Novak and Hillard commented on their experiences at ODU, describing a day in the life of an engineering student and how they became involved in the Solar Decathlon 2011. They answered questions about the house, the Unit 6, explaining that much of its design is aimed toward affordability.
Hillard described the Unit 6′s greywater system (of which she is the lead designer). "I don't know why more homes don't use greywater systems," said Hillard. "They're relatively inexpensive and aren't that hard to install."
The U.S. Department of Energy announced Wednesday the new location of the Solar Decathlon 2011. Originally supposed to take place on the National Mall in Washington D.C., the Decathlon will now live on the adjacent site, West Potomac Park between the Franklin Delano Roosevelt Memorial and the Potomac River.
"We look forward to holding another world-class Solar Decathlon in a world-class location–the National Mall's West Potomac Park," said Secretary of Energy Steven Chu. "Keeping the competition on the National Mall property allows the students to proceed with their existing home designs, specifically tailored for Washington's latitude, temperature, and humidity conditions. The West Potomac site is in close proximity to a number of attractions and will provide an ideal stage to highlight clean energy solutions for thousands of public visitors."
The decision for the new site came after much protest from Solar Decathlon competitors and supporters. Members of the twenty teams, competing against one another, presented a unified voice heard through a number of different media, including a mass petition which circulated Facebook, a short video protest to President Obama, and letters to Representatives.
For many Team Tidewater members, this morning was spent flipping through the day's edition of The Virginian-Pilot–the leading newspaper of Hampton Roads. The front page headline read, "Solar-design contest leads to teamwork by unlikely alliance."
Pilot journalist Scott Harper wrote a generous feature story about our role in the Solar Decathlon 2011 and the overall relationship we've formed between Hampton University architecture students and Old Dominion University engineering students, introducing readers to some of the key members of our team.
Moving Along Through Summer
Team Tidewater Prepares for the Big Day
Team Tidewater Virginia: The Unit 6 Arrives
Team Tidewater Virginia: Constructing the Unit 6
The Unit 6 is Almost Here
Team Tidewater Virginia: The Unit 6 Design
The Unit 6 Undergoes First Phase of Construction
Future Engineers Near and Far
Location Confirmed!
Team Tidewater Makes the Front page in the Virginian-Pilot
Team Tidewater Virginia is a collective of Old Dominion University and Hampton University students with a passion for developing innovative and eco-conscious solutions for a modern world. Rollover any of their pictures below for a brief description of each team member.
We would like to give our sincere thanks to all our sponsors. Whether it was donating, time, materials or money, the Unit 6 and Team Tidewater Virginia would not have been possible without their support.
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