Multifamily
Old Tools, New Tricks: Creative Solutions for Common Energy Problems
We the People...In Multifamily Buildings!
The Property Manager's Perspective: Getting Value from Benchmarking and Audits
Living on the Edge: Resiliency, Energy, and Affordability
BQDM: Retrofitting for Reliability
Active Design and Healthy Housing
Active Design is an evidence-based approach to the development of buildings and communities that uses architecture and urban planning to make physical activity and healthy foods more accessible. Affordable housing represents an ideal target for incorporating these strategies, since lower-income communities are disproportionately affected by obesity and chronic disease, and often have less access to health-supporting resources. This multi-disciplinary panel will share how Active Design supports healthier housing for people of all incomes and abilities.
Applying Passive House Principles to 160 Units of Affordable Housing - Lessons Learned
Fairfax Gardens was a 150 unit dilapidated public housing development in Taunton, MA. The THA selected Trinity Financial to be the developer, owner and operator of a 160 unit replacement program on two sites. The Hope VI Program requires a very competitive funding application that includes strong sustainability incentives measured using Leed and/or Enterprise Green community checklist criteria. The Fairfax Gardens funding application was successful in part because it committed to very aggressive energy conservation measures.
Tiny Bubbles: The Deal With Spray Foam
It Takes A City: Lessons from Somerville's Residential Energy Efficiency Program
In 2011, Somerville launched a city-wide residential energy efficiency program aimed at a difficult-to reach demographic: middle income rental properties. Efforts to reduce residential energy consumption with its dense population required numerous alliances: utility leaders, a banking institution, and consultants worked closely together. Over 60% of Somerville households are occupied by tenants; renter/owner roadblocks were addressed. This presentation will examine municipality, utility and resident collaborations necessary to make such a program succeed.