Reflections from THRIVE : South Pacific Passivhaus Conference 2023

Reflections from THRIVE : South Pacific Passivhaus Conference 2023

Its been Just over a week since the Australian Passivhaus Association hosted the THRIVE: South Pacific Passivhaus Conference in Sydney.?Although still extremely hard to put words to my experience of the event, I will do my best to articulate the motivation and sheer optimism it has evoked.

For those who have experience in the Not-For-Profit sector, events like these offer a vital opportunity to make an impact through sharing the work members, partners and the wider industry have been undertaking for a specific cause. APAs cause is simple –

Our vision is that all Australians live and work in healthy, comfortable, low-energy, resilient buildings.

This year, we chose the title THRIVE as we wanted to focus in on the benefits that building to the Passivhaus standard can create. Wellbeing is a core focus of the standard, and after all, isn’t it a basic right to live and work in buildings that support our health? With this in mind, we collated some of the industry's brightest minds to shed light on this topic from across Australia and around the world.?

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Panel Discussion : Leadership in Passivhaus

Key Insights

Thank you to everyone who has posted insights and learnings from the conference on Social Media since the conference (as a colleague of mine noted – we may have broken Linked-In for a while there!) Although a little late to the party, here are some of my own key take-aways. They are not technical, but instead draw on the attitudes, approaches and communication styles that I was particularly inspired by.?


Be the ‘Conditionally Optimistic Mosquito’

A reoccurring analogy over the two days was that of the mosquito. Its important to remember that even if you feel insignificant in the big scheme of things, impact is not tied to size or authority. Just think about being stuck in a room with a mosquito.?I'd like to build on this with a great insight from Zachary Semke 's (of Passive House Accelerator ) presentation centreted around optimism. Being the ‘optimistic mosquito’ will not be enough if we don’t use the right type of optimism. An optimistic child will wish for a treehouse for their birthday, where as a child that has conditional optimism will seek out timber, nails, ?tools, ?a guidebook and some helping hands to build them-selves the treehouse. In this sense, we each need to be the 'conditionally optimistic mosquito' in our spheres of influence if we want to see change. ?

Building on this, Clare Parry (of Development Victoria ) and David Barker (of Introba Australia discussed how we must shift our perception from ‘problem’ to ‘potential’. Their 9 step Passivhaus Playbook is based on exactly this mindset providing a framework to assist the industry tackle the challenges of scaling Passivhaus into the multi residential and social housing sectors for positive social impact. (It will be launched shortly – keep an eye out!)

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Zach Semke - Passive House Accelerator (those who were at the conference will get the joke behind this slide!)


We need a lattice, not a chain?

Capacity building was a hot topic at the conference. How do we upskill and empower our contractors, trades people, our designers, architects, decision makers and client groups to have the confidence to commit to and deliver Passivahus buildings? Why are we not hearing more clients ask for, or want to commit to, better outcomes?

On the closing plenary, Joe Karten (of Built. ), raised something that got me thinking. ?He noted that we need to stop talking about supply chains and value chains when trying to build capacity. ?Instead, we need to ?shift to a terminology that can capture the inherent complexity of this task – a multilateral lattice. We need to build capacity laterally across sectors of the industry, as well as hierarchically within each organisation. This will ideally include identifying champions across sectors and at all levels of a business and empowering them with the knowledge they need to influence change within their own realms of influence. This is how we build a market that demands better buildings, clients who commit to delivering them, and an industry who has the capacity to make this a reality. ?


The proof is (most certainly!) in the pudding

A noticeable shift happened at this conference compared to the last one held in 2019 in Wellington, New Zealand. Presentations shifted away from predictions and desktop modelling, to real-world analysis, as-built data and operational monitoring.

Australia is following our international counterparts now, with a strong shift of focus from proof-of-concept to demonstrated implementation and scalability.

As per the excellent presentation from Justine Prain , Energiesprong UK demonstrates how it is using a tried and tested policy framework from the Netherlands to deliver a deep energy retrofit program at scale across the country's public housing sector. Through utilising strategic investments and funding models (such as the ‘Comfort Plan’) the program facilitates the commercialisation of construction solutions. These standardised, prefabricated systems are based on the principles of Passivhaus, and make it possible to provide comfortable, low energy and affordable homes to the mass market. Wouldn’t that be amazing to see in Australia..?


Health is everything

All presentations, panel discussions and conversations I had at the conference really did not focus heavily on energy or carbon…they focussed on health. We know energy bills and operational carbon can all but be erased if you add renewables to a Passivhaus building. But what was staggering was the unparalleled health benefits that can be realised by building to this standard. No mould, no damp, no build-up of CO2. Joseph Lyth (of Respond Architects ) shared his moving story of designing and building his own passivhaus. He was inspired to do this for the health of his family as his children were suffering from asthma and back-to-back illnesses.

Since moving into the new home, he noted the vast improvement, not only in comfort, but also ?in his family's collective health and wellbeing. Similar experiences were shared by Natalie Colbert (of CanPLAY Pty. Ltd ) who developed a Passivhaus Day care centre in Canberra. She moved her family into it during the Black Summer fires of 2019/2020 as it was

‘the only place where we could breath due to the smoke’.

These recounts, amongst other projects that shared end-user testimonies, were noted by many in the audience, as the most impactful messages they will take away from the conference. I would have to agree – unmatched and undeniable improvements in indoor environmental quality and health is by far the most compelling and emotive reason to pursue the Passivhaus standard.

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Joseph Lyth prsenting Lower Saddle Passivhaus


In Summary...

Although it took us several years to make this conference happen in a face-to-face mode (thank you Covid) we got there. And wow, was it great to have so many passionate, driven, innovative minds in the same room. I am truely excited to see where Passivhaus can be taken in Australia - we are definitely at the making huge strides to bring this to the mass market.

Walking away from the conference, I have never felt more inspired, energised and motivated to scale Passivhaus in Australia - because everyone deserves to live and work in healthy, comfortable, low energy, resilient buildings.?

Thank you everyone who came and made it so impactful. Lets make the next conference even bigger and more impactful - the easiest way to do that is bring someone along with you. Im sure those of you who attended would agree - its so hard to describe the generosity of knowledge-sharing that occurs at a Passivhaus conference - not just between peers but between competitors too. There enough room for everyone - lets grow the industry in the direction we need to grow it in. As the saying goes

Alone you can go fast, but together we can go far

See you all there next time!

Acknowledgements

I would like to take this opportunity to acknowledge some of the key people who made this conference possible, and drove it be as successful as it was.

The APA Team

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(Left to right) Stalin Chakrabarty, Alexia Lidas, Samantha Bruce

Alexia Lidas , Samantha Tanner and Stalin Chakrabarty What a power team. Your sheer hard work, organisation and unwavering dedication to APA cannot be matched. APA is incredibly fortunate to have such an outstanding team taking it to new heights every day. Thank you for delivering this world class conference, and everything else you do for our purpose-driven organisation.

The Conference Committee

It was a pleasure to work alongside the wonderful Heather McCabe , Bohemia Hookham and Talina Edwards . Thank you for your hard work and for dedicating so much of your time to help make some of the key decisions for the event.


My Co-MC

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Jeff Robinson MC - Day 1

Jeff Robinson it was a pleasure to be Co- Master of ceremonies with you. (You definitely set the bar high!)






Thrive and Jive Host

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Thrive & Jive Event - Stiebel Eltron Showroom Sydney

Stiebel Eltron - What a night! Thank you ?for generously hosting over 100 guests in your stunning show room.





The sponsors, exhibitors, training partners and supporters

Thank you to the following companies for your ongoing and unwavering support of APA

aluplast GmbH , Blue Sky Windows , STIEBEL ELTRON Australia , Pro Clima Australia , Efficiency Matrix , Fantech , Siegware Architectural Innovations , LAROS Group , @Logik Haus, Rothoblaas , eclipse passive house , Renew , Australian Architects Declare , ArchiTeam Cooperative Ltd , ASBN Small Business Network , Australian Sustainable Built Environment Council (ASBEC) , prefabAUS , Camera di Commercio Italo-Germanica (AHK Italien) , Living Future Institute of Australia , Energy Efficiency Council Northrop Consulting Engineers , Detail Green , HIP V. HYPE , Frasers Property Australia and Emerald Building Services

The contributors

Thank you to all the speakers, panellists and moderators who brought the conference to life with your outstanding case studies and insights. The knowledge you have so generously shared will be sure to make a huge impact as we strive for better, healthier buildings in Australia

Andrew Martin Senior Design Manager, Construction Lendlease (AUS)end

Adam J. Principal, Architect @ Ryder Architecture (UK)

Andy Marlow Architect Envirotecture (AUS)

Ben Sinclair Visionary CORNERBLOCK (AUS)

Chris Nunn Head of ESG Scape (AUS)

Claire Bowles MSc , FRSA Regenerative Devleopment Lead i2c Architects (AUS)

Clare Parry Director of Sustainabilty Development Victoria (AUS)

Daria Teodorowych Sustainability Advocate LAROS Group (AUS)

David Barker National Sustainability Leader Introba (AUS)

李大伟 Director Atelier Ten

Gavin Salt Residential Lead i2c Architects (AUS)

Hamish White Director Sanctum Homes (AUS)

Jesse Clarke Innovation and R&D Manager Pro Clima (AUS)

Joe Mercieca Director Blue Eco Homes (AUS)

John Tallis Director, Architect Our Fabhaus (AUS)

Joseph Lyth Associate Architect Respond Architects (NZ)

Justine Prain Director Energiesprong (UK)

Kieran Leong Principal, Architect DesignInc (AUS)

Marcus Strang Better Buildings Senior Consultant HIP V. HYPE (AUS)

Matthew Cutler-Welsh Business Development Manager Green Building Council (NZ)

Matthew Carland Director Carland Constructions (AUS)

@Mark Van Haandel Director MVH Constructions (AUS)

Natalie Colbert Director CanPLAY (AUS)

Sean Maxwell Scheme Manager ATTMA ANZ (AUS)

Talina Edwards Architect Envirotecture (AUS)

Zachary Semke Semke Director Passive House Accelerator (USA)

Samantha Tanner

Senior Events Coordinator at Global Health Security Network

1 年

Amazing summary Kate! Thank you for the dedication and effort you poured into curating the conference program with the rest of the committee. ??

Joseph Lyth

Director, Architect, Certified Passive House Designer & Homestar Assessor. Pushing for healthy, low energy buildings. Built a #passivehouse on a budget: Instagram - @lowersaddlepassivehouse

1 年

Awesome write up Kate, and so good to finally meet many of you from 'across the ditch' in person!! Absolutely agree that the health benefits of PassivHaus were one of the key takeaways, I thought the 'how' was also prevalent - getting the whole team on board, and working as a lattice opposed to a chain was so insightful; not to mention the research showing that performance related items are only 25% of a construction budget - not a large percentage for your health, so surely the high end kitchen can wait...! Thanks so much to you & your team for organising such a great event, and I can't wait to see what progress is made by the next one, off the back off the enthusiasm from this one!

Justine Prain

Sustainability / Innovation project and programme delivery expertise / Collaborative research

1 年

No mean feat to create inspiring and energising events! Many congrats!

Brian Guinan

Certified Passive House Consultant, Certified Passive House Tradesperson, Accredited ATTMA air tightness tester

1 年

Fantastic summary Kate and keep up the good work. You are a fantastic leader for Passive House in our tough industry

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