Calling all Passive House Professionals: New Registration Process for Phius Trainings

Calling all Passive House Professionals: New Registration Process for Phius Trainings

Professionals taking advantage of the WTFP Express Grant to complete the Phius Certified Consultant (CPHC) Training and Phius Certified Builder (CPHB) Training programs register through Built Environment Plus.

Effective October 2024, Built Environment Plus made the following changes to the registration process for these programs:

  • BE+ offers monthly registration that closes on the last day of each month.  
  • BE+ gives registrants access to the self-paced materials (Phase l) and the ability to enroll in a live online session through Phius on the first business day following the registration deadline. Phius schedules live online sessions (Phase ll), not BE+.* Review session options on the monthly BE+ enrollment pages.
  • Express Grant applications are due to the Commonwealth Corporation at least 21 days ahead of the BE+ registration deadline.**

*Both training programs consist of two phases:

  • Phase I: Self-paced content to be completed ahead of live training (50-60 hours for CPHC; 8 hours for CPHB)
  • Phase II: 8, 3-hour live online sessions over the span of 2 weeks

    **Companies with 100 or fewer Massachusetts W-2 employees are eligible to take these trainings with WFTP Express Grant funding. Training must be completed within 1 year of the Express Grant contract start date to be eligible for reimbursement. Learn more about Express Grant funding here.

    See below for instructions to enroll in either of the training programs under this new process.

    Step 1: Select a Registration Date

    a. Navigate to the BE+ Trainings webpage. See a calendar view of upcoming training registrations on the right hand side of the page. 

    b. From this calendar view, navigate to the next available registration page that most closely aligns with the desired date to begin self-paced content (Phase l). (Example: A registrant looking to begin training as early as possible would select the registration page that appears on October 31st on the calendar, assuming they are completing this process on October 1st.)

    Step 2: Register for Training and Complete an Express Grant Application

    a. Register for the training. (Example: A registrant enrolling in the October 31st option would scroll to the bottom of the page accessed in Step 1 to find the Eventbrite registration box below).

    b. Submit an Express Grant application to the Commonwealth Corporation no fewer than 21 days ahead of the training registration deadline. (Example: A registrant enrolling in the October 31st option must submit an application no later than October 10th.)  

     

    Step 3: Accept the Express Grant Award

    a. The Commonwealth Corporation will send Express Grant award notification within 21 days of the application date. Once awarded, sign the Express Grant contract to accept the grant. This must be done by the training registration deadline. (Example: A registrant enrolling in the October 31st option would sign their approved Express Grant contract by October 31st.)

     

    Step 4: Complete the Training Program

    a. BE+ will share instructions to access self-paced materials (Phase I) and enroll in an upcoming scheduled live session (Phase II) via email on the first business day following the registration deadline. Follow the instructions to complete registration. (Example: A registrant enrolling in the October 31st option would gain access to Phase I and enroll in Phase II on November 1st.)

    See Upcoming Phase II sessions on the CPHC page, or Upcoming Live Sessions on the CPHB page, for upcoming live sessions scheduled by Phius. (Example: Of the options below, a registrant enrolling in the October 31st option might choose to take the February 17 – 28, 2025 CPHC Phase II session).

    b. Complete Phase I ahead of Phase II. (Example: A registrant enrolling for the October 31st option and opting to take the February 17 – 28, 2025 Phase II session would complete Phase I content between November 1st and February 16th).

    c. Attend the Phase II session selected through Phius. 

     

    Step 5: Submitting the Express Grant Reimbursement Form

    a. Submit an Express Grant reimbursement form to the Commonwealth Corporation within 30 days of completing Phase II. (Example: A registrant taking the February 17 – 28, 2025 Phase II session would submit their Express Grant reimbursement form by March 30th.)

    Contact the BE+ education team at education@builtenvironmentplus.org with questions.

    Ultra-Efficient, Economical Apartments Now In South Boston Are Part Of 'Big Wave'

    By Fred Bever

    You may have heard about passive housing: residences built to achieve ultra-low energy use. Imported from Germany, it's been kind of a boutique-y thing here until recently, with eco-minded homeowners making costly upfront investments to downsize their carbon footprints. But now, New England is joining a surge in large-scale passive housing development.

    The Bayside Anchor, a big, green, somewhat boxy-looking four-story building that overlooks a tidal cove in Portland, Maine, has joined the trend.


    'Ultra-Efficient' And Environmentally Friendly

    Architect Jesse Thompson says the 45-unit project had to meet a lot of goals: Construction had to be cost-effective enough to get financed by public and affordable housing groups; it needed common areas and office space for Head Start and a community policing station; it had to be ultra, ultra-efficient.

    And, finally, it had to meet the needs of tenants like Peter Janes, who was one of the first to move in this winter.

    “I know it had great insulation. I had to shut off my heat in February,” Janes says. “It was too hot.”

    The building does have great insulation — extra-great. Thompson says the exterior walls are several inches thicker than basic code would require.

    “It's recycled newsprint: it's 10 inches thick, you know, really well done. And there's triple-glazed windows. So you can sit next to the window in the middle of winter in a T-shirt and you won't be cold. And that allows us to really radically downsize the heating system,” Thompson says.

    There isn't a central heating system at all. Instead, each apartment has a small baseboard electric heater with an estimated electricity cost of just $125 a year.

    It takes more than thick walls to achieve those energy savings. It also takes a near-perfect seal on the building's envelope and a high-tech ventilation system to purge moisture while keeping warm or cool air in, depending on the season. Thompson calls it the building's “lungs.”

    “So all the bad air, all the bad smells go out. But the heat stays in,” he explains. “The fancy technical name is a 'heat recovery ventilator.' But they feel like magic to us.”

    There are other environmentally friendly features: a roof-full of solar panels, and underneath the ground floor's polished concrete slab, instead of a basement crammed with heating systems, big retention tanks allow rainwater to filter slowly into surrounding land, bypassing the city's overworked storm water system.

    And all for a cost that's low for Portland's go-go development scene. Thompson said prices for high-efficiency materials and systems are dropping fast. And, he says, public housing agencies are beginning to embrace the long-term savings gained through lower energy and maintenance costs.

    “Everyone is starting to see how the economics are working,” he says. “They are giving extra points for meeting these energy goals. So we're going to see a big wave coming in the next five years.”


    A Treat For Southie Developers

    It's reached South Boston now.

    “I don't want to be embarrassing about this, but it's a kind of miracle,” says developer Fred Gordon. On the site of a 19th-century waterfront rum distillery, Gordon is renting up the first apartments in what will eventually be a 65-unit passive housing building.

    “I could stand and look at this building all day long. I just eat it up. It's like having a new girlfriend,” he says.

    It's very much like the one in Portland: super-tight envelope, high-tech ventilation and no central heating system. But there's also an important difference. In this case, Gordon isn't relying on government incentives for affordable housing. He's going market-rate and plans eventually to sell the units.

    In Southie's hot housing market, Gordon's got one advantage: He bought an entire city block there back in 1984, when land was considerably cheaper.

    But he insists that the distillery project proves any developer can radically reduce a building's carbon output and still make a buck. Gordon says renters and buyers are willing to pay a 10 or 15 percent premium for passive housing features.

    “It's getting to the point where as an investment decision … [it's] increasingly attractive,” Gordon says. “That's what we want to do. We want to make it so that if a building is not a passive house, then people say, 'Oh, well, that's a real negative, I would rather do something that is a passive house: it's just better.' “

    Officials at the Chicago-based Passive Housing Institute say it's still a big ask to finance market-rate units that won't realize full energy-efficiency savings for decades. But momentum for large-scale passive housing really did start gaining last year, when the number of buildings the institute certified doubled.

    And that number is on course to more than double again this year, with projects getting bigger and bigger, including a 350-unit New York City high-rise.

    FXFOWLE PassivHaus Seminar

    By Jen Cole


    FXFOWLE joined the USGBC MA community on May 19th, 2017 for an invigorating presentation on their latest study showing that it is viable to design high-rise residential buildings to the Passivhaus Standard. FXFOWLE is an architectural, planning, and interior design firm in New York City with a global practice. The firm recently completed 888 Boylston Street, a LEED Platinum office building in Back Bay, Boston, and are currently constructing Ames Street Residences, a residential tower in Kendall Square, Cambridge, designed in collaboration with Stantec. 

    The morning seminar was presented by three partners and principals from FXFOWLE: John Schuyler, Ilana Judah, and Gustavo Rodriguez. It featured an introduction to the Passivhaus Standard, which is based on the concept of using simple, direct, and primarily architectural solutions with mixed-use building designs to create ultra-low energy buildings. The firm covered how this standard is applicable to higher education and residential projects, and the relevant case studies involved. Common approaches were identified that can be used to apply Passivhaus to a broad range of high-rise residential building designs.


    The presented study also addressed an industry-wide lack of familiarity with Passivhaus and dispels misperceptions about its applicability. The study aimed to determine how the construction industry can become more energy efficient when considering how high-performance envelopes contribute to architectural sustainability.

    Study Explores LEED Building Adaptation for Passivhaus Certification

    By USGBCMA Communications

    Can a building designed to meet LEED certification be adapted to meets Passivhaus standards?

    Recent research released by FXFOWLE into how New York City buildings can meet energy efficient Passivhaus standards featured contributions from two Simpson Gumpertz & Heger (SGH) staff members. Senior Principal Sean O’Brien and Staff II Brienna Rust were coauthors on “Feasibility Study to Implement the Passivhaus Standard on Tall Residential Buildings,” which explored the impact of adapting a building designed to meet LEED certification to one that meets Passivhaus. 

    Passivhaus is a design concept developed in Germany that uses architectural solutions like stringent air tightness and minimized thermal bridging to create buildings that consume very little energy. The New York State Energy Research and Development Authority sponsored this project to explore the viability of this approach for energy efficiency in the local construction industry. FXFOWLE led the study, and several other engineering and consulting firms contributed to the project. 

    The researchers compared a base case high-rise, mixed-use building in Queens, NY, seeking LEED v.3 Silver Certification with an adapted design to meet Passivhaus requirements. “The study examines the impacts of achieving the standard from architectural, enclosure detailing, mechanical, structural, constructability, resiliency, zoning, and code perspectives,” wrote the authors. They found a 47% reduction in primary energy consumption from the base model and an 85% reduction in heating demand, offset by a 2.4% initial cost increase and a 24-year payback. 

    “The findings of this study suggest that it is viable to design large high-rise residential buildings in New York City to meet the Passivhaus standard” with minimal aesthetic changes, the authors conclude. 

    Sean will present the results of this study as part of an expert panel discussion on 29 April at the AIA Conference on Architecture 2017 in Orlando, FL. 

     

    Last Call! LEED For Homes vs Passive House This Thursday!

    By Alexander Landa


    LEED for Homes and Passive House have quite a few similarities – as well as noticeable differences. For those who are still confused about how these two differ from one another, come to our morning session in Boston this Thursday, December 15th @8:30 AM until 10:00AM to learn more.

    Register here!

    About the event:

    Come to our Passive House and LEED for Homes educational session led by Mike Duclos, regional expert and market leader in Passive House design and Mike Schofield, LEED Faculty and LEED for Homes Expert. We will be comparing and contrasting the two systems and also looking at the market response to each. We will ask the attendees to drive the conversation and allow this expert panel to reflect against each system.

    We will take a deep dive into the residential market, what drives change and where we are seeing the most effective strategies for adopting green building. We will also have an opportunity to identify the overlap of the two systems, their philosophies and intents.

    For those sustainability experts in the room, we should also be able to outline the value of each system as it relates to Scope 1,2 and 3 GHG calculations and which standard might be more effective for different market segments.

    Speakers: Michael Schofield – Senior Project Manager Michael Schofield currently oversees projects across New England, supervising LEED certification and ENERGY STAR® (Homes and High-Rise) ratings of Clearesult’s new construction projects. He directs project managers on building methods and strategies to make improvements cost effective, to create more durable buildings, and to transform the market. Schofield’s work is focused primarily on multifamily and affordable projects. He is certified as LEED faculty and a trainer for ENERGY STAR Homes Version 3. From 2010 to the present, he is delivering trainings on the Energy Code and Smart Building Practices to code officials, builders, and design professionals across Massachusetts. Schofield holds a B.A. from the University of Massachusetts and an M.S. in Energy Analysis & Policy from the University of Wisconsin. He also holds a Massachusetts Construction Supervisor License, and is a Certified Building Commissioning Professional (CBCP).

    Mike Duclos – A principal and founder of The DEAP Energy Group, LLC, a consultancy providing a wide variety of Deep Energy Retrofit, Zero Net Energy and Passive House related consulting services.

    Mike is a HERS Rater with Mass. Residential New Construction Program, a Building Science Certified Infrared Thermographer, the PHIUS Certified Passive House Consultant responsible for the design and certification of the second certified Passive House in Massachusetts, holds a BS in Electrical Engineering from UMass Lowell, and two patents. He is responsible for two NESEA Building Energy Masters Series Passive House online courses on, and currently has three Passive House certification projects in process.

    Register here!

    Thursday, December 15th
    8:30AM – 10:00AM
    50 Milk St, 16th Floor, Edison Room
    Boston, MA, 02109