Chronique d'un pays où il ne se passe rien... ou presque !
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Rescooped by Daniel Denninger from Sustainable imagination onto Chronique d'un pays où il ne se passe rien... ou presque !
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L’oiseau qui se met en travers du gaz de schiste aux Etats-Unis

L’oiseau qui se met en travers du gaz de schiste aux Etats-Unis | Chronique d'un pays où il ne se passe rien... ou presque ! | Scoop.it

"C'est un petit oiseau qui risque de voler dans les plumes des grands groupes énergétiques américains, qu'ils forent des puits de gaz et de pétrole de schiste ou installent des parcs éoliens dans les grandes plaines des Etats-Unis."


Via Laurence Serfaty
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Rescooped by Daniel Denninger from landscape architecture & sustainability
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Sustainable Housing in Denmark by Lendager Architects

Sustainable Housing in Denmark by Lendager Architects | Chronique d'un pays où il ne se passe rien... ou presque ! | Scoop.it
Lendager Architects announced their first prize win in the competition to build the first DGNB-certified housing project in Denmark in Næstved.

DGNB is a new green building certification system expected to become the scale for sustainability in Europe. DGNB-Certification focuses on three equally weighted parameters: Environmental-, Social- and economical sustainability, for a holistic evaluation of built projects.

In total, the project will have 24 single family homes, built around a shared courtyard to encourage community and shared resources. Passive solar design with optimized window and shade placement allows for passive cooling and heating. Energy efficient design, including a tight thermal envelope with energy saving systems reduces power consumption, while rooftop photovoltaics produce electricity. Green roofs protect the home and provide further insulation. A close connection with nature and gardens encourages residents to live off the land.

As Lendager Architects told us about the project, “We wanted to answer the questions of how we can build without affecting the environment, how we can build without using new materials, how we can build houses that produce more energy than they use, and how sharing becomes a natural part of the daily life.”
Via Lauren Moss, landscape architecture &sustainability
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