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Solar
Application and Integration
 Active
and passive solar systems equipment - that hardware and elements
which capture the sun’s energy for heating bath and wash water;
heating swimming pools for extended season use; generating
electricity to power devices; cooking food; warming and cooling
buildings, etc. Solar equipment use is growing in Arizona
neighborhoods, cities and towns. Buildings are incorporating solar
as part of the basic equipment package. People want to use solar
equipment because it is cost effective, resource saving, simple to
use and understand, and there is a logical, direct and unencumbered
energy resource in the sun as it moves across the sky.
Solar equipment
which provides for a building’s performance and the residents
needs, is no longer some “future” thing - Today, solar elements
and panels are part of the mainstream with other element of in the
building equipment palette - electric service and distribution; gas
meters and pipes; water meters and piping, water heaters, fire
sprinkler systems; waste water pipes and vent stacks; air
conditioners; evaporative coolers; heating systems; television
receivers and connections; phone lines and junction boxes; etc. All
these systems are integral elements of a buildings’ operation in
meeting human needs as well as comforts. To this list, and in many
cases, replacing some items on the list, Arizonans are incorporating
solar devices, equipment, and design elements. Reasons for this
incorporation may vary - from saving money to saving the
environment, and the applications range from use of a solar hot
water heater to photovoltaic panels to cool towers.
Just as in the use
of any other type of equipment, the use of solar can have a direct
impact upon a building - its’ performance, its’ look, even
its’ form and shape. At the same time, the building also has an
impact upon the optimal use of solar strategies and equipment used -
affecting both placement and performance. To assist Arizonans in the
use of the sun as another element of the citizen’s energy mix, the
State of Arizona has enacted legislation that clearly stipulates
that there can be no prohibition to the use of solar energy. This
legislation has the intent and effect of both encouraging as well as
protecting Arizonan citizens right to solar utilization.
ISSUES: (top)
* Codes,
Covenants, and Restrictions
As Arizona’s population
and economy grow, there is also growth in the building
market. Increasing numbers of people means more buildings,
and meeting the need for more buildings results in
developments and subdivisions. These developments reflect
the public’s desire and demand for neighborhood identity
and integrity, and to this end developments often have
defined conditions of building and site appropriateness,
identified as Covenants, Conditions and Restrictions. |
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CC&Rs were drafted to mitigate, among other things,
unsightly installations of roof-mounted equipment of
television aerials, evaporative coolers and heating/air
conditioning equipment and unkempt yards and properties.
Definitive CC&R’s established an aesthetic standard in
order to maintain visual integrity, which was believed to be
a primary element in maintaining property value. Some of
todays CC&Rs have precise definitions down to building
style, materials, and even color. Unfortunately overly
restrictive CC&Rs promote situations where all buildings
look alike and there is no visual interest and disallowance
for variation, reducing a neighborhood “look” to one of
sameness and boring homogeneity. |
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subdivisions |
Today, subdivision
requirements have a common restriction - generally, no equipment
visible on a building, most notably the roof. In order to maintain
an aesthetic of clean lines and building form, equipment such as
coolers, air conditioners, and television aerials must be located
elsewhere or be visually screened. This prohibition accomplished
its’ original purpose in screening or removing unsightly
mechanical equipment from the skyline and placing it out of view.
Unfortunately, this
“no equipment on the roof” restriction comes into conflict with
optimal conditions of solar equipment placement, effective solar
equipment utilization, good solar design, and sometimes is even in
direct conflict with Arizona law encouraging use of solar energy.
Ideally, the installation of solar equipment should be achieve
optimum performance for the Owner, but restrictive CC&Rs have
negatively impacted performance by forcing placement of equipment in
situations of limited exposure to the sun; locations that require
longer runs (of piping, wiring, etc.) than necessary; locations
which require restrictive, and sometimes costly, screens; and/or
placement of equipment in less than optimum exposure angle to the
sun, each and all of which provide less than optimal results for the
building owner.
Recently, in litigation
involving a Home Owner Association’s (HOA) attempt to
restrict residents use of solar equipment on building
rooftops (the only, and most effective, place it could be
used), Arizona courts ruled against the restriction, and
reinforced the solar rights of Arizona citizens.
Additionally, the Arizona Solar Energy Industries
Association (AriSEIA), has initiated workshops and
activities with HOAs throughout Arizona to provide effective
and appropriate definitions and implementation of solar
equipment incorporation standards, in order mitigate future
conflicts between homeowners and HOAs, and to meet State
legislative intent. To this end, the Az. Department of
Commerce Energy Office has supported AriSEIA in this
endeavor, and continues to be a resource for Arizona
citizens. |
* Design and
Aesthetics
The desire for optimum
equipment performance of equipment often results in the need
to mitigate site specific conditions through additional
structure - mounting solar panels on racks for proper tilt
angles and exposure. These racks, placed on roofs for
optimum exposure, have come under fire and rejection from
Homeowner Associations committed to maintaining the
aesthetic qualities of the neighborhood. While effective in
establishing proper orientation and attitude of solar panels
toward the sun, these installations project a discontinuity
with the building design and are perceived by many as ugly
and unsightly appendages to otherwise attractive buildings. |
Today’s
subdivisions have fallen into stylistic characterizations (Santa Fe
style, California tile roofs, etc.) instead of evolving from
appropriate environmental response which would result in a truly
Arizona style. Subdivisions are laid out with numerous
considerations - density, views, circulation, etc. with little or no
consideration is for basic tenets of good energy, solar and
environmental design.
Energy issues are
met by adding insulation and efficient mechanical systems without
consideration of using positive aspects, or mitigating negative
impacts of the site and the climate to reduce both the amount of
equipment used, and the amount of energy required to run it.
Effective energy benefiting actions involving orientation, building
shape, space planning, amount of glass, and/or incorporation of
active and passive solar and energy efficient equipment as part of
the building shell are overlooked. Desert houses face west into the
intense sun; roofs are flat in snow country; inordinate areas of
glass wrap buildings forcing residents to take defensive measures;
and building forms and structure do not readily allow for
integration of solar equipment as part of the building’s fabric.
While
the idea and ideal of maintaining a neighborhood character
and quality is desirable, current design and construction
practices make integration of solar strategies and equipment
problematic, and when coupled with CC&R restrictions
regarding solar equipment, provide conditions for conflict,
penalties, litigation and unhappiness - all which are
counter to the heart of a neighborhood environment and value
- one of belonging and being a part of shared community, and
being able to use Arizona’s most prevalent resource - the
sun. |
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Solar
integration is easily implemented in the design and
construction of a new building - equipment and element
incorporation can be executed to make the project a seamless
and integrated “whole”. Proper building orientation and
siting can be determined. Appropriate building form can
simplify the incorporation of equipment into the structure.
Proper space planning can optimize the distribution systems
related to solar equipment use (piping, wiring, etc.).
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More
problematic is the integration of solar devices and elements
into the existing Arizona building stock. |
Existing buildings
come in an array of orientations, forms, roof shapes, construction
and materials - some very compatible with use of solar strategies
and integration of equipment, and others contrary to good solar
design posing problematic conditions for the building owner wishing
to use solar. Even award winning Arizona architecture suffers from
this poor consideration, with glass walled boxes in the dessert.
Sites may not have any appropriate location for a solar
installation. Building roofs may not have appropriate angle or
orientation to the sun. Restrictive CC&Rs may prohibit the
placement of equipment on a effective south facing roof, or require
screening that may effectively reduce equipment performance, or
force placement of equipment in locations which effect performance.
Whether
it be new or old buildings, Arizonans respond positively to
the idea of an integrated “whole”. Additions and
renovations that provide a visual continuity are more
readily received and enjoyed than those projects which have
additions are perceived as unsightly because of their
incompatibility of form or integration. What is needed is a
result which meets both the functional requirements of the
equipment and aesthetic sensibilities of the people,
providing the best for Arizonans and Arizona architecture. |
Of course site and
situation, and type of system play a role in where equipment winds
up. A passive thermosiphon hot water system with separate storage
may have a lower location for panels than a hot water heating system
which uses pumps, which would allow for panels to be placed on the
roof. Photovoltaic panels may be fixed systems integrated into a sun
struck roof, or be ground mounted for ease of access or for use with
a tracking system.
TOWARD SOLAR
EQUIPMENT USE AND INTEGRATION (top)
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The
sun’s movement is in a predictable pattern. As the earth
makes its annual elliptical trip around the sun, its axial
tilt provides for the seasonal changes in the northern
hemisphere. The summer sun is high overhead and its
appearance and impact are longer in duration and more
intense during summers, whereas the sun’s appearance is
shorter in duration and lower in the horizon as it traverses
the winter sky. Like all applications that use the sun’s
energy, exposure is a primary and critical element. While
simple direct exposure will get results, ideal positioning
provides the optimum performance of any piece of solar
equipment, whether it is a solar water heater, a
photovoltaic panel, a solar cooker or even a passive solar
heated building. |
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The 3 primary
aspects of optimizing performance of solar equipment are
uninterrupted exposure to the sun through orientation; appropriate
angle to the sun (tilt angle); and effective placement.
Orientation
Maximum
performance of solar equipment and passive heating strategies is
based on continued exposure to the sun. Outputs are optimized when
there is clear connection to the sun for the entirety of daylight
hours - the more exposure to the sun, the more water can be heated,
the more electricity generate, and the more heat can be generated
for comfort. Collector locations must be face the sun’s path as it
traverses the south sky, free of shade, for the entirety of daylight
hours.
Tilt Angle
Solar
water heating is most effective when it can provide hot water under
coldest conditions - i.e. winter. The winter sun is lower on the
horizon so the ideal angle of a collector should more vertical (to
45 degrees). Solar pool heating is more in demand in the colder
parts of the year so this angle of exposure can be equally
important. Solar cooking in the winter is more effective. This tilt
angle is a very necessary condition for optimizing solar equipment
use.
Positioning and
orientation have significant impact upon the performance of any
system. For example an array of PV panels tilted to the sun produces
over 50% more electricity than one, which is simply vertical.
Location
Location
of equipment is a critical consideration. Placement optimizes
conditions by having short runs of delivery - water heated by a
solar collector should have as short a run to the storage and/or use
as possible to minimize transfer heat losses. Electrical
installations benefit from short delivery systems. Reduced runs mean
less material, less labor and materials for installation, less
maintenance in the future, and less overall cost.
An additional
benefit of solar equipment placement is one that directly impacts
the shape and form of a building, adding visual interest as a
byproduct of the solar functionality. Passive solar buildings take
their form and shape from the direct relationship in using
nature’s resources. Axial elongation along the East/West axis to
provide more southern exposure and minimize unwanted east and west
exposures to intense summer sun; roof forms and/or elements which
incorporate solar equipment and strategies; specifically calculated
overhangs to protect from summer sun high in the sky while allowing
for the access of lower angle winter sun; vertical forms of cooling
tower projections; recessed windows and doorways for thermal
tempering; and colors and textures which enhance taking advantage or
mitigating conditions.
APPLICATIONS AND
EXAMPLES (top)
Implementation of solar equipment and solar strategies have a
range of options, from integration on site to integration as part of
a building. Currently, there are 2 major pieces of solar equipment -
solar water heater systems (panels, piping, storage) and
photovoltaic panels (electricity generation from sunlight, wiring,
electrical equipment, electrical “storage” for off grid
installation) , with a number of other pieces of solar applications
like cookers, roof ponds, thermal chimneys, cool towers, etc.
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water heater
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pv
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roof pond
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cool tower
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Arizonans have been
resourceful, creative and ingenious in the incorporation of solar
equipment and strategies into their lives and their sites. Rural
Arizona, in particular, has less governmental and subdivision
restrictions regarding codes and CC&Rs, more sense of rootedness,
and more commitment to using solar and renewables. The variations of
solar integration range across the State from urban areas to rural
sites, and they all are responses to conditions, type of equipment
and application, and needs of their Owners. Integration may result
in the following applications:
1) Equipment
placement adjacent to the building
* Ground mounting
In some cases, if
there is appropriate access to the sun, ground mounting has been
used successfully in Arizona for fixed photovoltaic panel arrays as
well as individual panels on trackers, which follow the course of
the sun to optimize operation. Panels mounted in open areas on a
site allow for freedom of operation and movement necessary for a
tracking system, and/or for ease of installation, access for
maintenance and adjustment for both tracking and fixed systems.
This may also be an
appropriate integration strategy for passive hot water heating
systems, which use non-mechanical thermosiphon circulation methods
for heating water for personal use, or for use in radiant heating of
floors. Since hot water rises, and cold water settles, the
thermosiphon water heating system has water, heated by the sun at
the collector, naturally rising to a storage tank or through radiant
heating pipes embedded in floors, and the colder water from the
storage tank or the floor system, is circulated back to the panel.
This convective loop runs continuously as the sun shines and works
well as long as the collector panel heating the water is below the
level of the delivery or storage system. Some applications with
south sloping sites, place collector panels below the floor level of
the house to capitalize on the thermosiphon effect of this passive
approach.

Prescott house |

Wright house |
In
these ground-mounting applications, solar equipment is located in
response to the ease of location, ease of access, and direct and
easy maintenance or in response to the terrain, type of equipment,
and end use - sloped site integrating a passive thermosiphon water
heater with end use being heating of a building and/or for domestic
purposes. Some such installations have integrated equipment as part
of a building element such as a porch or deck.
In all cases, proper
orientation as well proper tilt angles can be easily achieved,
thereby having equipment operate at its optimum in providing
electricity and/or hot water.
* Separate
structure mounting -
Sometimes,
equipment is mounted on, an adjacent structure. Photovoltaic
systems that are completely off-grid and provide for the
entirety of electrical service of a house require an
extensive amount of batteries in order to store enough
electricity for nighttime and overcast day usage. Use of
batteries entail the need for an extensive amount of space
as well as an area that is well ventilated in order to
dissipate the hydrogen gas that is formed. Some applications
provide a dedicated structure for this purpose and
incorporate the photovoltaic panels and equipment such as
inverters into the structure, thereby minimizing runs
between panels, inverters, and storage. |
Solar water heating systems used for heating pool water in order to
extend the swimming season, can be incorporated into trellis and
shading structures that are part of a patio and pool area. Since
there is no necessity for storage (the pool water is heated
directly) this provides a direct connection with short runs and
minimal line loss inefficiencies.
2. Equipment
placement as additions to the building (top)
Equipment
can be mounted directly on the building as a separate
element or appendage. While solar elements can be attached
to any part of a building that has good southern exposure to
the sun, the most advantageous location at the roof. Roofs
generally provide a condition of unencumbered and unshaded
access to the sun’s path, and the location puts equipment
out of the way. Additionally, a roof application can allow
for placement of equipment directly above other elements of
a system (hot water tank, mechanical room for photovoltaic
equipment, etc.) thereby reducing runs which may reduce
commensurate installation and materials costs, and reduce
transfer losses. |
Ideal
exposure of photovoltaic and solar water heating panels is
to the south and at an angle which maximizes the performance
of the panels. Since the winter sun is available for a
shorter time than in the summer, and is lower to the
horizon, equipment performance is optimized when tilted at
an angle that puts it perpendicular to the sun’s rays.
This tilt angle has a direct impact on the output of the
system. Summertime conditions are less a factor, primarily
because there is so much sun for a longer period of time. |
Many existing and new buildings are not properly sited for optimum
south sun exposure, nor have roofs designed and constructed with
proper tilt angle orientation to the sun. Some have no tilt at all,
incorporating the prevalent Santa Fe flat roof style. These
conditions force owners to live with, or mitigate negative
conditions.
* Rack
installations
Equipment can be placed on
roof-mounted racks which place panels at the correct
orientation and angle to the sun. Rack mounted panels can be
used to mitigate conditions of poorly oriented roofs; roofs
with improper tilt angles, and flat roofs. While effective
in providing proper conditions for equipment performance
these installations are perceived as unsightly and
incomputable with the building design, and have been the
crux of recent conflicts between homeowners and their Home
Owner Associations (HOA). While Arizona courts have made
judgment in favor of the homeowner in this conflict, the
fact still remains that some rooftop solar installations
still have the issue of visual incompatibility with the
building form and design. |
* Screening
In order to address
the issue of visual discontinuity and intrusion, some installations
have incorporated screen elements which prevent viewing the
equipment and racks. While screening can be executed in a manner to
blend with the building architecture in flat roof situations, it is
much more problematic in pitched roof and poor orientation
conditions. Screening and other such visual barriers must be large
enough and spaced from the equipment sufficiently in order to
minimize shading which negatively impacts performance. The addition
of visual screening also adds cost to the solar installation.
* Flush Mounting
Equipment can be
placed flush to existing roof slopes in order to provide a
compatible installation with the building’s architecture. These
installations can incorporate trim, which visually integrates the
equipment into the roof structure. Arizona owners and contractors
have successfully installed solar equipment that is visually
compatible with existing roof pitches and materials, and having the
aesthetic impact equivalent to a skylight.
While effectively
providing visual compatibility, such placements result in less than
optimal performance of equipment due to less than ideal orientations
and exposure to the sun.
3. Integrated
Installations (top)
Combining building form and
optimal functional requirements of solar strategies and
equipment, this approach integrates solar equipment and
strategies as a part of the building fabric and
architectural expression and design, sometimes coupling
multiple energy and resource efficiency strategies. The
building planning, design and construction provide
appropriate conditions for energy efficient operations and
integration of active and passive solar equipment. |
* Solar
Integrated Buildings
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An
integrated solar energy building incorporates ideal
conditions for both passive and active solar applications,
from space heating and cooling to power generation to
incorporation of solar hot water systems. Integrated energy
buildings, and building elements, are correctly located in
terms of orientation, and exposure to the sun and correctly
structured to provide appropriately angled roofs and
elements for optimal solar equipment performance.
Additionally, an integrated solar energy building is one
that evolves its design and expression - its character and
style - from the attributes of its solar (active and
passive) and energy characteristics. |
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Integrated systems
solar buildings vary in execution and expression, even while
maintaining common attributes and premises related to environmental
conditions and resources in both passive and active solar
applications.
Orientation to the
south allows for use of the sun for passive heating purposes in cold
climes and for mitigation of negative west and east sun heat in
dessert conditions. This is also an ideal condition for solar
equipment performance. In some projects, south facing roofs are
angled to appropriate tilt angles and equipment is mounted directly
as another “skin” to the building fabric. It is known that an
array of PV panels tilted to the sun produces over 50% more
electricity than one which is simply vertical. Collectors, whether
water heating or photovoltaic, become one with the building form and
expression.
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solar
integrated south facing roofs |
* Building
Integrated Photovoltaic Systems
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developments in photovoltaic systems are bringing panels
that both generate electricity and are part of the roofing
system. This dual function application easily incorporates
to solar building design and construction that provides
appropriate roof pitches for optimum solar exposure. The
photovoltaic system, a solid state semiconductor technology
converting the sun’s energy directly to electricity,
without moving parts, making noise or making emissions, is
developed as a Building Integrated PV system which
integrates this technology into the building construction,
sometimes replacing or integrating with existing
construction materials that form the building’s exterior
“skin” - i.e. the roof or wall system. The PV system
then becomes a dual-purpose element, not only generating
electricity for the inhabitants but also acting as the roof
and/or wall of segment thereof, of the building. |
Appropriately
oriented and pitched roofs are also compatible for inclusion of
solar hot water panels that benefit from ideal exposure and
placement and benefit the building design with integrated design
elements much like skylights add visual interest to roof lines.
Integrated
Solar/Energy Building Elements (top)
Not all integrated
energy applications must encompass entire roofs on a monolithic
building block. Buildings derive aesthetic interest from their
component elements like clerestorey windows, chimney structures,
overhangs and facia designs, and from building massing and
variations in wall planes.
The integrated solar
energy building incorporates solar equipment and applications into
this scale of building element. A north facing rooftop clerestorey
windows can provide the structure for south facing solar equipment
on the back side, thereby combining two functions - one of
introducing daylight - the other of producing hot water and/or
electricity, within the same structural element.
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This
solar/day lighting element can also include openable windows
and glazing to facilitate building natural ventilation
exhaust of unwanted interior heat. Now there are four
functions for the one building element...
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it provides natural
illumination
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it provides for natural ventilation and building cooling
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it provides a place for
solar water or photovoltaic panels, and...
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it provides an interesting
and dramatic building design element.
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Examples of
element/solar integration is the placement of photovoltaic panels as
a part of the building eave system, and the integration of water
heating solar panels into a south wall.
Multiple functional
building elements is a strategy that lends itself to solar
installations in existing buildings. While it may not be desirable
to incorporate a solar device into an existing building fabric
because of renovation costs, it may be quite feasible and desirable
to do a single modifying action that has multiple applications
including solar. Besides improving functionality to a building, the
multiple energy/solar modification pays for itself with savings that
is realized in energy efficiencies, and in savings realized in the
use of solar equipment. It is a modification that will pay for
itself in energy saved and in the increase in property value.
Solar applications
are a growing reality in the building landscape. Traditional
perceptions of aesthetics, appropriateness, and value are changing
in response to the realities of energy and environmental
considerations, need for energy security, and desire for energy
stability and self-sufficiency. Buildings are incorporating
environmental design strategies in response to site conditions, and
available natural resources, and are incorporating solar equipment
and devices, which impact building design and construction.
Buildings that integrate solar attributes and equipment define
themselves in a form and expression that reflects local conditions
and resources. The careful and considerate integration of solar,
energy and environmental elements into the building, whether
existing or new, is a benefit that manifests itself as the basis of
a truly indigenous and local architecture (images below are
examples).
This
presentation was constructed by the Arizona Solar Energy Association
for the Arizona Solar Center, Inc. under contract with the Arizona
Dept. of Commerce Energy Office, funded by the Dept. of Energy
Million Solar Roofs program. Materials and information were provided
by a number of sources.
Financial
support for this presentation has been provided by the Arizona
Department of Commerce (Energy Office) and the U.S. Department of
Energy through (DOE) Grant No. DE-FG51-01R021250. However, any
opinions, findings, conclusions, or recommendations expressed herein
are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views
of the Energy Office or U.S. DOE. The State of Arizona and U.S. DOE
assume no liability for damages arising from errors, omissions or
representations contained in this presentation.
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