East Village at Knutsford: A Case Study in Sustainable Urbanism
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Background
1.2. Living Laboratories
1.3. Case Study
2. Methods: Development Design Features
2.1. Development Intention
- Net Zero Energy Homes that produce more energy than they use over an average year, while achieving high levels of comfort and amenity. These will be all-electric homes, with no reticulated gas supply being connected to the development.
- A Net Zero Energy Development, meaning that the annual average energy production at EVK should exceed the annual average consumption.
- A 100% renewable energy development, meaning that all electricity used onsite is to be from renewable sources. This includes onsite energy systems (in this case, rooftop solar photovoltaic systems) and electricity sourced from the grid. Because there is no renewable gas supply available to the site, or more widely, and because there is never likely to be such a supply, gas connection was ruled out.
- A largely energy-self-reliant development, meaning that dwelling and common services energy requirements are sourced from onsite generation systems as much as is practical and commercially viable.
- An Electric Vehicle (EV)-ready development that allows for the home charging of EVs. The electrical design allows for vehicle charging at the high end of home-charging rates, and the energy requirements of EVs have been considered in the setting of the targets and objectives for the project (with provision for electric bicycles and scooters as part of the overall strategy).
- Reducing reliance on mains water supply as much as is practical.
- A landscape design that supports the above objectives while also achieving best practice in urban greening, including seasonal shading, food production and wildlife habitats.
2.2. Delivery Innovations
2.3. Built Form Innovations
2.4. Energy Innovations
Modelling to Verify Energy Strategies
- The NatHERS tool is used as a standard compliance pathway for dwellings to comply with the energy efficiency requirements of the Australian National Construction Code but can also be used to analyse designs and identify opportunities to improve performance or required changes to achieve a target.
- Precinct energy modelling: A bespoke energy model was developed to allow detailed scenario analysis and to be able to test a variety of financial models. The parameters were then run in the HOMER platform (developed by the US National Renewable Energy Laboratory) to confirm that the key results were consistent.
2.5. Water Innovations
2.6. Landscaping Innovations
3. Results: Modelled Performance
3.1. Energy
- Common lighting and water pumping loads.
- Electric vehicle charging loads.
- Dwelling design and systems choices, such as the 7.5-star NatHERS rating [46] and the use of efficient appliances, including air-sourced heat-pump hot water systems and induction cooktops, reducing electricity requirements by around 35% from the local average.
- Solar PV systems meet loads directly while the sun is shining and, because of the embedded network, energy can be exported directly to neighbours. Electricity imports are reduced by up to 26%. Without a battery, around 60% of the PV electricity generated on site would be unused and typically exported to the grid, if such feed-in was permitted.
- The battery system enables the renewable energy produced on the site to be stored and drawn on when required by households within the embedded network. Grid reliance is expected to be approximately 20% in winter months.
3.2. Water
- Savings in the order of 25% brought about through reduced lot sizes compared to the Perth average resulting in reduced irrigation volumes.
- Improved water-use efficiency, including better-performing internal water fixtures and efficient irrigation, as well as efficient water-use behaviour and leak detection supported by smart metering, leading to a further 25% reduction.
- The use of alternate water sources including rainwater and sustainably managed groundwater to substitute mains water by around 30%.
3.3. Cost Comparisons
4. Discussion and Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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ENERGY INITIATIVES | WGV | EVK |
NatHERS rating * | 7 star minimum | 7.5 star minimum |
Reticulated natural gas | Yes (optional connection) | No |
Minimum solar PV per dwelling | 1.5 kW min. Upgraded to 3.5 kW via developer sustainability package | 6.6 kW PV with 5 kW inverter packaged with fully designed homes |
Battery for energy storage | No site-level shared battery system | Shared 670 kWh battery for 36 townhouses and common services |
Hot water | Solar Hot Water System or heat-pump water heater | Heat pump (5 star) packaged with fully designed homes |
Air conditioning | Reverse cycle (3 star ** min.) | Ceiling fans installed in living areas No AC provided—can be added by owner if desired |
Cooking | Not specified | Induction cooktop Electric oven |
Electric Vehicle charging | Not specified | Dedicated circuit for home charging, plus public fast charger |
Smart metering | Research phase only | Permanent strata owned embedded, remotely read metering network |
Drying court | Mandatory | Provided |
Shade tree | Deep root zone mandatory; tree provided via developer sustainability package | Provided |
Lighting | LED or compact fluorescent | LED |
MODELLED ENERGY USE REDUCTION | 80% | 80% |
ACTUAL ENERGY USE REDUCTION | 54% + 20.5 kW/day export | To be verified once occupied |
WATER INITIATIVES | WGV | EVK |
Water-efficient fixtures beyond minimum compliance (using WELS *** ratings) | Yes Shower heads: 3 star (max. 7.5 L/min) Toilets: 4 star min. All other taps (exc. outdoor and bath): 4 star min. | Yes Shower heads: 3 star (max. 7.5 L/min) Toilets: 4 star min. All other taps (exc. outdoor and bath): 4 star min. |
Water-efficient landscape requirements | Yes, including drip irrigation to garden beds, low-water-use plants, irrigation controller and soil conditioning | Yes, though likely to have greater control of outcomes as the landscape and irrigation installations will be installed by the builder |
Rainwater harvesting | Dual plumbing required for toilet and washing machine, with min. 70 m2 roof catchment available to tank location; 3 kL tank plus pump and controls provided via developer sustainability package | 7 kL tank installed and connected to toilet, washing machine and hot water service; entire roof catchment connected (average 150 m2) |
Shared non-drinking water supply (groundwater) | Community bore for irrigation only | Strata groundwater bore for irrigation and garden taps |
WSUD stormwater controls | Yes | Yes, but more comprehensive due to strata ownership |
MODELLED MAINS WATER USE REDUCTION | 70% | 80% |
ACTUAL MAINS WATER USE REDUCTION | 48% | To be verified once occupied |
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Share and Cite
Byrne, J.; Mouritz, M.; Taylor, M.; Breadsell, J.K. East Village at Knutsford: A Case Study in Sustainable Urbanism. Sustainability 2020, 12, 6296. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12166296
Byrne J, Mouritz M, Taylor M, Breadsell JK. East Village at Knutsford: A Case Study in Sustainable Urbanism. Sustainability. 2020; 12(16):6296. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12166296
Chicago/Turabian StyleByrne, Joshua, Mike Mouritz, Mark Taylor, and Jessica K. Breadsell. 2020. "East Village at Knutsford: A Case Study in Sustainable Urbanism" Sustainability 12, no. 16: 6296. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12166296
APA StyleByrne, J., Mouritz, M., Taylor, M., & Breadsell, J. K. (2020). East Village at Knutsford: A Case Study in Sustainable Urbanism. Sustainability, 12(16), 6296. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12166296