Schlumberger
 
Engineering Challenge
Designing an Energy-Efficient Building

SEED
 

For this project you will design a building that uses energy as efficiently as possible.  Look at traditional buildings in your area for ideas on how to minimize energy use. 

You should also try to make use of energy sources other than fossil fuels whenever possible.  After designing the building you can build a model to prototype your ideas.

The strategies that you use should be specific to the climate and conditions where you live.

  Students at Malaysia workshop building prototype
Students build a prototype of their energy-efficient design
at a SEED workshop in Malaysia, March 2006.
 

Step 1
Analyze the energy needs and sources for buildings in your area.
Describe general energy needs and sources.

Possible energy needs

Possible energy sources

Heating and/or cooling

 

Interior lighting

 

Heating water

 

Storing food

 

Cooking food

 

Washing and/or drying clothes

 

Small appliances

 

Other

 

Step 2
Look at traditional buildings in your area.

  Visiting a traditional  house

We can learn a great deal from the way people constructed buildings in pre-industrial times.  How did they provide for heating, cooling, cooking, food preservation and light before there were modern machines and appliances?

In the picture at the right, SEED students in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia are visiting a restored house built in the early 20th Century.  They learned about ways of keeping a house cool without air conditioning or electric fans.

Step 3
Select the type of building.

There are many different types of buildings besides those where people live. Office buildings, concert halls, sports arenas, shopping malls, are all buildings with special purposes. All have energy needs. What type of building would you select for your project?

Step 4
Design your building.

Taking into account what you have learned about traditional buildings, design an energy efficient building of your own.  But also include use of modern technology to improve energy efficiency.

There are several ways for a building to be energy-efficient. However, the key is to minimize the total energy use. This can be done with passive and active design elements. Passive elements would include building orientation and overhangs. Active elements would include motorized shutters and programmable thermostats.

You can use a GoGo Board to sense temperature and light conditions and then use that information to actively control components of your building to maximize energy efficiency.

  Prototypes created at workshop
Energy efficient building projects at a SEED workshop in Malaysia in March 2006
  Test...evaluate...modify
Test … evaluate … modify …

Step 5
Build a prototype.

Build a working model based on your design. Decide on an appropriate scale.  Choose materials. Build it.

Step 6
Test your prototype.

Test the active and passive design systems of your prototype building to see if they perform as you wish.Take data on the systems. Make any necessary revisions in your design

SEED
Related SEED Student Projects

Energy Efficient Building Project
Submitted to SEED by students and teachers at SMK Binjai in Malaysia.

Georgian Green House
Submitted to SEED by students and teachers at SMK King George V, in Malaysia.

Related Links on the SEED Web Site

SEED Energy Project
Join volunteers, teachers and students as they study energy sources and explore how to put their learning to practical use.

Engineering Challenge: Design An Energy Playground
What if all the energy spent at playgrounds could be harnessed to do work that is now being done by using conventional sources of energy?

divider
bullet
Download a pdf version of this activity
Latest Challenge  Submitting Your Project Past Challenges
 
 

…more Science Lab projects about…
Air & Space
Earth Science
Electricity & Magnetism
Properties of Liquids

 

…try some interactive experiments in our…
Virtual Lab

…or test your skills at our…
Math Puzzle of the Month

Looking for more information? Ask the Experts