“SolarArchitecture is not about fashion, it is about survival”
–So maybe it could be about both?!
5% of the world’s population now lives in urban centres. This fact implies a contribution of 60-80% of the total world energy consumption—accordingly, the Global energy consumption in buildings expected to double and even triple by 2050.
Architecture and construction need solutions to integrate non-fossil energy systems and sustainable building concepts. The building envelope offers enormous potential for areas for urban energy harvesting through building-integrated photovoltaics (BIPV).
A variety of BIPV design options arise from shape, size, layout, colour, different PV technologies and materials.
Students from architecture and product design at the University of Kassel are working in teams on the task of solar activation of building envelopes in different scenarios. Bau Kunst Erfinden and Helmholtz-Berlin selected experts accompany the project as advisors and input providers.
In the SolarArchitecture project, students have the opportunity to design innovative, sustainable concepts for decentralized energy generation through BIPV. The project intended to provide space to question existing conventions and explore the options and limitations of solar materials. The interplay of design possibilities and functional-constructive solution approaches will be examined both analogously and digitally through simulations, models and mockups. Students will exhibit process and results digitally and analogously in simulations, models, and mockups at the University of Kassel at the end of the semester.