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User:Vanloh/Draft of Kenneth L. Haggard

Ken Haggard is an American architect, educator, and solar pioneer who has designed more than 300 buildings and seen more than 200 built. He is a licensed Architect in California and Florida. He and his partner Polly Cooper were awarded the American Solar Energy Society Passive Solar Pioneer Award in 1996. They have been leaders in both the passive solar and straw bale building movements.

As a child Ken was influenced by his father, a landscape architect who ran a Civilian Conservation Corps camp during the Depression. After his retirement, he concentrated on restoring a burned out peanut farm in south Texas to a mixed savannah grassland. Ken grew up with Texas dust, heat, shallow oil wells, rainwater harvesting, hot springs and cottonmouths. After a BS in chemical engineering and service in the Army he switched to architecture and design with a BA at NC State and then a Masters in Urban Design at the University of Pennsylvania. After stints as a planner and designer he moved to teaching. From 1967-1988 he taught at Cal Poly San Luis Obispo. In the summer of 1970 he taught in Bangladesh, an experience that changed his approach to design and architecture, and led to his lifelong commitment to design for the real world.

From 1972 to 1975 he was the Principal Investigator for a Research Evaluation of a System of Natural Air-Conditioning funded by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. This project built and tested the first 100% naturally heated and cooled home in the country. In 1975, Ken and Polly met as professors at Cal Poly State University, beginning a long partnership. They spent many years at Cal Poly being a minority voice for a more sustainable approach to architectural design and the education of architects. In 1976, they established their architectural practice, specializing in site-responsive design that takes full advantage of on-site thermal sources and sinks and on-site energies to provide solar heating, natural cooling and ventilation and daylighting. In later years, their emphasis has broadened to include a wide range of sustainable design issues including sustainable materials, rainwater harvesting and regenerative landscapes. By combining their different perspectives, they feel they achieve more comprehensive, integrated decisions.

In 1979-80 Ken was Co-principal Investigator on a project for the California Energy Commission that led to development of the Passive Solar Handbook for California and from 1984-1988 he was the founder and Director of the Renewable Energy Institute at Cal Poly. After retiring from Cal Poly the work at the San Luis Sustainability Group intensified, with staff reaching 7 at one point. Projects ranged from home and commercial remodels to new homes, schools, and commercial buildings.

In 1993 their office and home were destroyed in a wildfire. Losing all the records, plans and photographs and artwork was devastating, but the clean slate allowed them to design and build a model passive solar off-grid office and home using renewable materials such as straw bales and wood milled from the fire killed trees.

As the early 2000s arrived the firm began to focus on public buildings that could enhance understanding of passive solar design and sustainable building materials. This included several pivotal projects, including the Wolken Education Center at Hidden Villa in Los Altos, the Congregation Beth David Synagogue, and the San Luis Obispo Botanic Garden Education Center. Ken rounded out his experience with a Permaculture Design Course in1997.

Beginning in 2006 Ken began to focus on education and writing after he realized that buildings use 72% of America’s electricity and generate 40% of the global warming gases. Books assumed more importance than projects as the growing global crisis made it clear that more architects and designers needed to understand how to design buildings that used 90% less energy but were more comfortable and secure.

Projects

During its 36-year history, natural conditioning with passive solar heating, passive cooling, natural lighting and natural ventilation has been a fundamental concern of San Luis Sustainability Group.

1972-1975: Prototype Roof Pond House This solar house was built in 1972 as a prototype for the roof pond system of heating and cooling invented by Harold Hay. Several aspects distinguish the project: • First documented 100 percent heated and cooled passive solar building. • Only instrumented solar house in operation during the 1973 energy crisis. • First comprehensive interdisciplinary evaluation of a passive solar building. • First application of computer-aided simulation modeling of passive solar building performance, done by Phil Niles, PE.

1976: Energy-Efficient Office Building SLOSG’s design of an energy-efficient state office building, with Christie Coffin, Phil Niles, Jake Feldman and Jens Pohl, was an Award of Merit winner in the California Energy-Efficient Office Building Competition. In addition to illustrating the application of the roof pond system to larger buildings, the design addressed urbanism and human-scale issues now referred to as “The New Urbanism.”

1978-1980: Passive Solar Handbook for California This handbook by Ken Haggard and Phil Niles, sponsored and published by the California Energy Commission, was designed to make it easier for architects in the state to design passive solar buildings. As part of this handbook, Niles designed the Cal Pas prediction model. This model became the basis of the performance standards in the then-new California Title 24 energy code and the basis of most passive solar performance models.

1976-1990: Passive Solar Residences. The rise of the fossil fools in the 1980s saw solar architecture increasingly viewed as redundant and unfashionable. SLOSG survived by remaining small, with low overhead. During this period, the firm designed 160 solar buildings, mostly residences. 1991-1994: Green Materials and Social Aspects In the early ’90s, SLOSG expanded its design considerations to include green materials and the social aspects of building. Noland House, Anchor Ranch, Lone Pine, Calif. This project, in collaboration with eco-pioneer Pliny Fisk, combined passive heating and cooling with broad resource, health and metabolism issues for a move toward sustainability. The first permitted straw bale building in California, it featured composting toilets and processed wastewater with an interior microbial bed filter/marsh system. Tierra Nueva CoHousing Community, Oceano, Calif. This project, 27 units plus the Common House, illustrated that passive solar principles could be applied to a dense, socially cohesive situation.

1994: AIA and IUE Sustainable Communities Competition This entry, a collaboration between SLOSG and faculty from Cal Poly State University, was one of the first-place winners in this international competition. It proposed processes for Los Osos, a community of 15,000, to evolve into a sustainable community: • Regeneration of the watershed of Los Osos Valley. • A structure for developing a sustainable economy. • Diversity in transportation, housing types and community infrastructure. • A community center consisting of civic facilities combined with a resource-recovery facility and open space.

1991-2000: Firm Expansion SLOSG operates an off-grid, straw bale passive solar complex near Santa Margarita, Calif. During this period, the firm expanded into campus planning, education buildings for nonprofit groups, landscape regeneration and the politics of sustainability on the Central California coast.


2000 to Present: Passive Solar Public Buildings and Education Green design comes of age as its critical importance becomes increasingly obvious. SLOSG’s projects include the San Luis Obispo Botanical Garden Education Center, Congregation Beth David Synagogue and the Mountainbrook Community Church—all registered with the U.S. Green Building Council for LEED certification. Books and articles on passive solar architecture include local, national and international publications.

References

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  1. ^ 1996. American Solar Energy Society. www.ases.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=230&Itemid=98
  2. ^ 2004. with Polly Cooper. Leading by design. Solar Today. (Nov/Dec):24,25
  3. ^ 2011. with David A. Bainbridge. Passive Solar Architecture. Chelsea Green. www.chelseagreen.com/bookstore/item/passive_solar_architecture/
  4. ^ 1976. with Phil Niles and Harold Hay. Nocturnal cooling and solar heating with water ponds and movable insulation. ASHRAE Transactions 82:part 1, 793-807.
  5. ^ 2004. with Polly Cooper. A sustaining partnership. Solar Today. Nov/Dec:24-25.
  6. ^ 1998. with Polly Cooper. Rising from the ashes. Solar Today. Sept/Oct:26-30; 2000. Robyn G. Lawrence. Comfortably off the grid. Natural Home July/Aug. 24-29.
  7. ^ 2010. with David Bainbridge and Larry Schlussler. Seeing the invisible: passive solar heating and window glass. Solar Today. May:16,18. www.solartoday-digital.org/solartoday/201005#pg16
  8. ^ 2009. with David Bainbridge. Passive solar heating. Solar Today. Special issue: Get started:32-33. www.solartoday-digital.org/solartoday/200910#pg32
  9. ^ 2009. with David Bainbridge and Rachel Aljilani. Passive Solar Architecture A Pocket Reference. International Solar Energy Society. Freiburg, Germany.
  10. ^ 2008. A Brief Architecture History of San Luis Obispo County. Central Coast Books, Los Osos, CA.
  11. ^ 2008. with Polly Cooper, Richard Beller, Mike Blum and Paul Wolff. Beth David Synagogue--A High Performance Green Building. Solar 2008 National Solar Energy Conference, May, San Diego, CA.
  12. ^ 2008. Basics of passive solar design. Solar Today, May/June. 6A-9A.
  13. ^ 2007. with David Bainbridge and Polly Cooper. Water walls: an effective option for high performance buildings. Solar Today. July/Aug. 38-41. http://ases.org/index.php?view=article&catid=12%3Alatest-features&id=56%3Acase-history-sungalow- shines&option=com_content&Itemid=23
  14. ^ 2006. with Polly Cooper Fractal Architecture: Design for Sustainability. Booksurge, Charleston, SC. http://www.booksurge.com/Fractal-Architecture-Design-for-Sustainability/A/1419624695.htm
  15. ^ 2006. Straw Bale Construction--Low Tech vs. High Tech or just better physical properties. Physics and Society. 35(1):6 p. www.aps.org/units/fps/newsletters/2006/january/index.html
  16. ^ 2005. with Polly Cooper and Jennifer Rennick. Chapter 3, Natural Conditioning of Buildings in Alternative Construction: Contemporary Natural Buildings. Elizabeth & Adams. Wiley.