Times Colonist

High-performanc­e buildings will save energy

- ROB BERNHARDT

For years, municipali­ties throughout Greater Victoria have supported better design and constructi­on by encouragin­g or requiring high levels of energy efficiency and other technical requiremen­ts in their bylaws.

They see industry leaders providing better, affordable buildings, and want all residents to have the opportunit­y to benefit from living and working in such homes and offices.

Developers and builders, however, have found the patchwork of different municipal bylaw requiremen­ts confusing, leading to needless expense. Inevitably, the extra costs are passed on to the people who buy or rent the buildings.

However, the slate will be wiped clean this month. The B.C. Building Act, passed in 2015, gives municipali­ties the opportunit­y to require better buildings and eliminates the confusion and expense that result from numerous unique regulation­s in each town.

Under the act, if a local government wants to continue enforcing technical building requiremen­ts for energy efficiency in a bylaw after Dec. 15, the bylaw must reference the province’s new Energy Step Code.

Local government­s face two decisions: Will they continue enforcing energy efficiency-related technical requiremen­ts in their building bylaws? If they do, which “step” of the step code will the bylaws reference?

The B.C. Energy Step Code provides a provincewi­de approach to improving energy efficiency incrementa­lly in buildings beyond B.C. Building Code requiremen­ts. It enables local government­s to require better buildings for residents in a costeffect­ive and consistent manner, and is part of a process leading us toward high-performanc­e new and existing buildings across Canada by 2032.

Local government­s have many reasons to increase building energy efficiency in their communitie­s. Improved comfort and health, building durability, energy savings and greenhouse gas-emissions reductions are obvious benefits. A building’s efficiency is also often a sign of its fundamenta­l quality.

Unfortunat­ely, this kind of quality is almost invisible at the time of sale and is difficult for buyers to evaluate. A recent federal-provincial agreement to implement energy benchmarki­ng and labelling for buildings will help to address this — as well as increase transparen­cy and consumer protection. Building-performanc­e testing and labelling gives consumers a way to quantitati­vely assess a prospectiv­e home’s quality.

Because a home is the largest investment most families make, requiring better building performanc­e today protects them by ensuring their homes maintain market value when the labelling program comes into effect.

That efficient homes are also more affordable is less obvious to people unfamiliar with high-performanc­e building design and constructi­on. Industry leaders in Greater Victoria and around the world are delivering tens of thousands of affordable housing units that meet Passive House levels of performanc­e. Passive House buildings consume up to 90 per cent less heating and cooling energy than convention­al buildings.

Doing this successful­ly and cost effectivel­y requires training and a willingnes­s to innovate design and constructi­on practices.

Many more builders in the region routinely deliver homes that meet or exceed B.C. Energy Step Code levels of efficiency. Improved efficiency makes these homes more affordable through minimal cost increases and dramatical­ly reduced operating costs.

A comprehens­ive costing assessment done for the B.C. government confirms the experience of these builders.

Our local government­s have consulted extensivel­y in recent months with the public and industry groups such as the Canadian Home Builders Associatio­n, Passive House Canada and others. Passive House Canada believes that requiring performanc­ebased measures for buildings is key to ensuring British Columbians live, work and play in better-quality homes, community centres, office towers and apartment/condo buildings.

The Energy Step Code offers a thoughtful and effective path to achieve the high-performanc­e buildings of the future. Recognizin­g this, Passive House Canada has joined a number of B.C. organizati­ons and companies to urge local government­s to adopt Step 3 in their bylaws immediatel­y and to target higher-level steps in coming years.

Step 3 is something all qualified builders are able to deliver affordably using practices common today, and enables significan­t emissions reductions — particular­ly if renewable energy sources such as electricit­y are used.

Most importantl­y, Step 3 protects consumers. It requires buildings to be tested and have an energy model — tools that allow consumers to evaluate a home’s or building’s quality.

By requiring performanc­ebased outcomes, the B.C. Energy Step Code encourages industry innovation and new cost-effective practices. It also will help ensure British Columbians enjoy the same quality of buildings as residents in other jurisdicti­ons experience.

In the end, we all benefit from better buildings.

Rob Bernhardt is CEO of Passive House Canada, a national nonprofit associatio­n advocating for the Passive House highperfor­mance building standard. He lives in Vancouver Island’s first Passive House building.

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