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United States Project Notice - High Performance Building Design With 3D-Printed Carbon Absorbing Funicular Structures


Project Notice

PNR 53562
Project Name High Performance Building Design with 3D-printed Carbon Absorbing Funicular Structures
Project Detail HESTIA addresses the need for implementing carbon removal strategies by converting buildings into carbon storage structures. HESTIA is also important for nullifying embodied emissions. The majority of these emissions are concentrated at the start of a building’s lifetime and locked in before the building is ever used. This upfront emissions spike equals 10 years of operational emissions in a building constructed to meet standard code, but increases to 35 years for more advanced, higher operating efficiency buildings, and more than 50 years for high-efficiency buildings operating on a lower carbon intensity grid. These time horizons go beyond 2050 climate targets, which means embodied emission reduction strategies are a high priority. Project Innovation + Advantages: The University of Pennsylvania will develop a comprehensive building structure strategy with high-performance, prefabricated, funicular structures for minimized mass and maximized surface area for carbon absorption. The team will use innovative carbon-absorbing, 3D printable concrete as a primary structural material and bio-based carbon-storing materials for the buildings envelope and finishes. Additive manufacturing technology will be used in fabrication to reduce waste. The building design’s thermal mass, adaptive envelope, and electrified building systems with heat pumps will reduce operational energy over the buildings life cycle. This technology complements mass-timber-based approaches by addressing global construction demand without straining existing forest resources. Potential Impact: HESTIA projects will facilitate the use of carbon storing materials in building construction to achieve net carbon negativity by optimizing material chemistries and matrices, manufacturing, and whole-building designs in a cost-effective manner.
Funded By Self-Funded
Country United States , Northern America
Project Value USD 2,407,364

Contact Information

Company Name University of Pennsylvania
Address ARPA-E Program Director: Dr. Marina Sofos Project Contact: Prof. Masoud Akbarzadeh Press and General Inquiries Email: ARPA-E-Comms@hq.doe.gov Project Contact Email: masouda@design.upenn.edu
Web Site https://arpa-e.energy.gov/technologies/projects/high-performance-building-design-3d-printed-carbon-absorbing-funicular

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