A REAL powerhouse! Ecohome comes complete with heated pool and sauna yet produces THREE times more electricity than it needs
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It may look like a Portacabin that has been involved in a nasty accident, but this slanting roofed building is actually the ultimate ecohome.
The house, which was designed by Norway's Research Centre on Zero Emission Buildings and architecture firm Snøhetta, produces more than three times more energy than it needs.
Built in Larvick, Norway, this prototype for what could become the homes of the future, has a roof covered in 1,614 square feet (150 square metres) of solar panels to produce electricity.
The roof of the Zero Energy Pilot House has been angled to the southeast to capture as much sun as possible
The roof has been slanted at exactly 19 degrees and is angled towards the south east to ensure that it can capture as much sunlight as possible.
The roof also has a thermal solar panels for heating water and uses rainwater collectors for use in the toilet and in the garden.
The windows are also designed to capture as much sunlight as possible to help keep the home warm while heat exchangers warm incoming air and tap water.
The designers claim that the house should produce 19,200kWh of electricity from its solar panels each year while solar collectors used for heating water gather a further 4,000 kWh annually. In total is produces enough energy to boil a kettle 185,600 times.
Norwegian researchers and architects have designed the house to meet the needs of an average family
The house has been constructed from materials to make as little impact on the environment as possible
However, the building needs just 7,272 kWh per year - the equivalent of boiling a kettle 58,000 times.
Perhaps surprisingly for an energy efficient home, it also includes a swimming pool and a sauna.
The water for the pool and shower is heated using surplus heat from inside the building while the sauna is heated using firewood.
The house also features an outdoor dining area made from recycled timber and has a vegetable garden to enable small scale food production.
Each floor has a single radiator that is capable of heating the entire house.
The outdoor dining area (left) has been built with recycled wood and timber to give the house a cabin-like feel
The outdoor pool is heated using excess heat drawn from inside the house while the sauna (left) uses firewood
Each room also has sensors to ensure that air and light is directed to those that are being used.
Snøhetta, which also designed the National September 11 Memorial Museum & Pavilion at the World Trade Center site, claims that the house can also use energy from geothermal wells - drawing heat up from underground.
They claim it should produce enough surplus energy to run an electric family car.
Many of the materials used to construct the house have been chosen to make as little impact on the house's carbon emissions as possible.
The roof is covered in photovoltaic panels to produce electricity and thermal solar cells to heat a water boiler
Snøhetta insists it has tried to use building materials that both make the house attractive and energy efficient
Snøhetta said: 'The volume of the house describes a single family house, however, the building is intended for use as a demonstration platform.
'The house has a characteristic tilt towards southeast and a sloping roof surface clad with solar panels and collectors.
'These elements, together with geothermal energy from energy wells in the ground, will serve the energy needs of the family house and generate enough surplus to power an electric car year-round.
'The project has a strong focus on retaining home-like qualities through non-quantifiable properties.
'Emotive comfort and sense of well-being have governed the design process to the same extent as energy demands.
'The grounds employ a variety of spaces that can be enjoyed year-round.'
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