dated on July 9, 2014 by Drew: After receiving thousands of requests from architects, builders, researchers, academics, policymakers, and enthusiastic members of the public, Honda has decided to make its experimental smart home completely open source. Starting today, all of the building plans, architectural and mechanical drawings, material specs, and raw 2D and 3D CAD data available to the public. In doing so, the company hopes that interested individuals across the globe will be able to use these plans as a starting point to build their own sustainable homes. To get your hands on these newly-available specs, just head over to HondaSmarthome.com and hit the downloads tab. There you’ll be able to access detailed info on everything from the home’s geothermal heating and cooling setup to its innovative energy management system.



Originally published 3-26-2014: In March, Japanese automobile manufacturer Honda held a Web conference to show off its latest experiment: a cutting-edge smart home designed from the ground up to showcase innovative technologies that enable zero net energy living and transportation. We tuned in to get a tour of the place, and liked what we saw.

The house, which resides in the West Village campus of the University of California, Davis, is capable of producing more energy on-site from renewable sources than it consumes annually, including enough energy to power a Honda Fit EV for daily commuting.

To make this possible, the house uses a combination of solar power, an intelligent energy management system, and a host of different low-energy appliances and fixtures. Due in part to the ultra-efficient design of the home, all of the energy needed for space heating, space cooling, ventilation, lighting, hot water, appliances — and even transportation energy for the Honda Fit EV — is supplied by a 9.5kW solar photovoltaic system mounted on the roof.

Screen Shot 2014-03-26 at 10.38.05 AMSolar panels are definitely the lynchpin of the home, but the various high-efficiency systems hidden inside the walls and floors are arguably its most impressive feature. Take the geothermal heating and cooling system for example. In the ground beneath the house, eight 20-foot deep boreholes allow a geothermal heat pump to harness the ground’s relatively stable thermal sink to heat and cool the home’s floors and ceiling throughout the year.

Then there’s the house’s light system. Not only are the lights around five times more energy efficient than those found in the average American household, they’re also designed to better support the health and wellbeing of the home’s occupants. Honda worked with researchers from the California Lighting Technology Center at UC Davis to develop a lighting system that mimics natural shifts in daylight that occur from morning to night, so as not to upset the your circadian rhythm. At night, the lights will take on more of an amber hue in order to minimize your exposure to blue light, which halts the production of melatonin and makes it harder to sleep. In the morning, the lights automatically put off more blue to help put your body in an alert and energetic state.

All this stuff is definitely cool, but the most groundbreaking feature of Honda’s smart home is the company’s proprietary home energy management system (HEMS) — a combined hardware and software system that monitors, controls and optimizes electrical generation and consumption throughout the home’s microgrid. The system basically consists of a 10kWh lithium-ion battery that can store energy collected by the home’s solar panels and intelligently dish it out whenever you need power later on. And if the house ever creates a surplus of energy, HEMS can even supply power back to the grid.

The home is just an experiment right now, but even so, it stands as a shining example of what super-efficient, zero-impact homes of the future might look like. Find out more here.

Article originally published on 03-26-2014 under the title “Honda’s experimental smart home is so efficient it actually creates surplus power.”










Three bedrooms, an open kitchen, one-and-a-half baths, and 1,200 square feet of boxy space coated in red: That’s what the ideal home in Sweden looks like, based on two million people’s opinions. Swedish housing website Hemnet analyzed data from over 200 million clicks to find what the country really wants in a home, and architectural firm Tham & Videgård turned it into a reality.
”The fact that two million people visit Hemnet each month provides a good foundation to interpret what kind of homes people are dreaming about,” Hemnet spokesperson Staffan Tell said in a statement. “The Hemnet Home provides interesting insights into how Swedes want to live right now.”



Hemnet House Swedish Dream House LightsThe resulting structure might not suit everyone, but it takes into account what many people are looking for: It has four rooms, not including the kitchen, because the houses most Hemnet visitors click on have an average of 3.8 rooms. Over half, 57 percent, have an open kitchen instead of a dedicated room, so the property’s kitchen is “social.” These design choices are either black or white, but the architects decided to marry other elements to suit several tastes. The boxy shape has an almost shipping-container look, but its color is “Falu red,” a nod to the deep red paint found on traditional Swedish barns and cottages, making the exterior both modern and classic.

Based on data about interior design, there are neutral-colored sofas (with gray, black, white, brown, and beige being amongst the most popular hues), white walls, and wood parquet floors. Tiles cover the walls and floors of the 1.5 baths, and the guest bathroom also includes a shower.
Since the homes are tailor-made for Swedes, they may soon be able to buy them for their very own. The process of selling these airy, efficient little homes is just getting under way, but Hemnet expects them to go for about $332,000 each. One of the most fascinating things about the Hemnet House is that it makes us imagine how different the U.S. version would look. Twelve-hundred square feet? Newly built American homes are an average of 2,400 square feet and just keep getting bigger. The one thing we can all agree on? Balconies for everyone!









Living in a shipping container might instantly sound like a nightmare, but if you know how to spruce it up, you could live a life of luxury.



This is what one architect has proven in Dallas, Texas, with a 3,700-square-foot house completely composed of shipping containers. Matt Mooney, who is responsible for the design, wanted to stay true to the materials as he built his creation, according to The Daily Mail. However, he knew that this didn’t have to translate into “ugly” or “uncomfortable.”

The house, which is known as PV14, is situated near White Rock Lake. A series of 18-wheelers needed to bring 14 large, steel boxes into the neighborhood to make Mooney’s dream a reality. He had been envisioning PV14 in his mind for more than 25 years, according to the Houston Chronicle. Now, the humble abode is complete, and Mooney is enjoying every inch of it with his wife, Barbara, a retired nurse.



The house can accommodate a single family with three bedrooms and three-and-a-half bathrooms. It has a two-car garage, ground-level entertainment area, and a storage bay. The walls are double-insulated and have steel modules to maintain the structural integrity of the building. A concrete pier and beam foundation ensures that the house will be around for years to come.
However, it’s the luxury features of PV14 that may be shocking to those who thought Mooney would be limited by shipping containers. The house has a small penthouse and a roof deck with a panoramic view of the city. It also features deep balconies that allow natural light to flow freely throughout the structure. As a cherry on top, PV14 has a 40-foot-long swimming pool.
Recently, the house was on display for a tour organized by Dallas’s chapter of the American Institute of Architects. Although the tour is over, the house continues to make headlines for its use of unusual materials.









Location: Nederland, Colorado
Square Footage: 1,517
Although not comprised entirely of shipping containers — the lavish home only utilizes two — Studio H:T’s latest venture in the realm shipping container homes was nothing short of gorgeous. The firm built the sustainable home on an existing rock outcropping in the Colorado wilderness, allowing the occupants to take capitalize on the distant ridge views surrounding them. The containers straddle the home’s central living space, functioning as bedrooms and a kitchen, as well as a bath, office, and laundry room. The upper floor even features a bed that slides on tracks for an outdoor experience without the tent.







Location: Berlin, Germany
Square Footage: Unknown

This is technically an office/creative space and not a home, but let’s not be sticklers about that. According to Platoon, the space “hosts art projects, workshops, and events. It also presents a multitude of creative and artistic project that clash with the regular art institutions. Clubculture, subcultural networks, [and] global movements.” Not to mention, as you can see in the image above, the designers turned the face of the building into a multimedia screen that projects images to the outside world.







Location: Victoria, Canada
Square Footage: 1,920

Canadian architect Keith Dewey took a cue from a small-time magazine when designing the Zigloo Domestique Complete complex, one of the first shipping container homes in the entire country. He retrofitted eight, 20-foot cargo units with a proper roof, outfitting the interior of the home soon  afterward with a slew of sustainable materials intended to go hand-in-hand with the passive ventilation and the house’s modern design. He supposedly saved 70 trees by using the recycled materials, only to sell the house for a cool $728,000 a mere six years after completion.






Location: San Antonio, Texas
Square Footage: 320
A mere 320 feet of space is not much to work with, that is, unless you’re creating minimalist guest house in your backyard. The private residence, constructed with the help of local Texas architect Jim Poteet, adds a touch of luxury to a recycled shipping container measuring a narrow 8 feet wide and 40 feet long. The foundation of the structure utilizes a bevy of recycled telephone poles, while the flooring and wallcovering feature repurposed bamboo. The roof of the navy-blue crate even offers garden space — making it more than just a space for storing tools and housing people passing through.