Green building in Germany explained
German developments that employ green building techniques include:
- The Solarsiedlung (Solar Settlement) in Freiburg, Germany, which features PlusEnergy houses.[1]
- The Sonnenschiff (Sun Ship) in Freiburg, Germany, which is also built according to German solar architect Rolf Disch PlusEnergy standards.[2]
- The Vauban quarter, also in Freiburg.
- Houses designed by Baufritz, incorporating passive solar design, heavily insulated walls, triple-glaze doors and windows, non-toxic paints and finishes, summer shading, heat recovery ventilation, and greywater treatment systems.[3]
- The new Reichstag building in Berlin, which produces its own energy.
- The Heichrich Böll Siedlung in Berlin-Pankow as a forerunner for Green Building in post-cold war Berlin emphasizes on "every day ecology", instead of High-Tech-Measurements.
In January 2009, the first German certificates for sustainable buildings were handed over. The standard for the new certificates is developed by the DGNB (Deutsche Gesellschaft für nachhaltiges Bauen e.V. - German Sustainable Building Council) and the BMVBS (Bundesministeriums für Verkehr, Bau und Stadtentwicklung - Federal Ministry of Transport, Building and Urban Affairs)
See also
External links
Notes and References
- http://hosting.more-elements.com/MoccaMS/projects/plusenergie/index.php?p=home&pid=266&L=0&host=1 Rolf Disch Solararchitektur - Plusenergiehäuser
- Web site: Rolf Disch Solararchitektur . 2009-11-17 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160817012420/http://hosting.more-elements.com/MoccaMS/projects/plusenergie/index.php?p=home&pid=266&L=0&host=2 . 2016-08-17 . dead .
- John Imes, Grün auf Deutsch, at HOME in the Capital Region, pp 35–36.