A Central Otago straw bale home with a "holistic and
aesthetically pleasing approach" to sustainability and an
"inspiring" retrofit in Auckland were winners in the
Sustainable Habitat Challenge.
The awards were announced last night at a ceremony in the
Port Chalmers Town Hall, as part of the Sustainable Habitat
Challenge Symposium being held in Dunedin this week.
Teams were challenged to design, fund and create their vision
for sustainable housing in less than two years.
Challenge co-ordinator Tim Bishop praised the nine teams from
around New Zealand who created eight new builds and retrofits
for the challenge.
It highlighted the diversity of sustainable building
practices available in New Zealand and showed it was
practical and possible for everyone, he said.
Judges were architect Dave Strachan, Beacon Pathway manager
Nick Collins, researchers Maggie Lawton and Nigel Isaacs and
broadcaster and Dunedin city councillor Dave Cull.
Team Housewise, whose members were from Housing New Zealand,
the University of Auckland, New Zealand Housing Foundation
and Landcare Research, won the retrofit section with its work
on a Housing New Zealand property.
Cr Cull said the project had "inspiring potential" to make a
difference to New Zealand.
Team Central Otago, incorporating Otago Polytechnic's Central
Otago campus and Sol Design, won the new build section with
its insulated straw bale house.
"We were struck by the holistic and aesthetically pleasing
approach to sustainability taken by the team," Ms Lawton
said.
The Challenge was established by Otago Polytechnic and
supported by the Ministry for the Environment.
Commended:
For vision: The Plant Room;
Waikato; Whareuku; BACH 101; Ecocrib.
For collaboration: CPIT and Dunedin; Whareuku; Team
Housewise; BACH101.
For communication: Whareuku; Team Otago; The Plant
Room.
For innovation: Whareuku; Team Central Otago.