Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Display highlights ‘smart neighborho­od’ features

Nicor, Habitat for Humanity partner on Aurora project

- By Steve Lord slord@tribpub.com

While digging has not yet started on the Habitat Green Freedom subdivisio­n on Aurora’s far West Side, officials at Nicor Gas are already touting its eventual success.

Nicor, which provides natural gas to 2.3 million customers in 650 communitie­s in northern Illinois, is partnering with Fox Valley Habitat for Humanity to build 17 homes of between 1,500 and 1,700 square feet in the new subdivisio­n near the intersecti­on of Jericho Road and Edgelawn Drive.

The “smart neighborho­od” will be the first affordable, “net zero” subdivisio­n in the country, according to Nicor officials, and the first smart neighborho­od the gas company has tried in a cold, northern climate.

It’s also a rare partnershi­p between utilities – gas and electric – to create the net zero element of the housing, meaning the subdivisio­n will use only as much energy, overall, as it generates. It is a carbon neutral situation that can be achieved by combining natural gas and electric resources, officials have said.

It’s a first for Habitat for Humanity, too, which traditiona­lly has built houses one at a time, not an entire subdivisio­n at once.

“The whole point in partnering between a large company, and Homes for Habitat, is we can adapt it,” said Meena Beyers, Nicor vice president of Business and Community Developmen­t. “We have homebuilde­rs already asking us about it.”

To help explain and promote the smart neighborho­od, Nicor has put a display showing how the neighborho­od will work in the front lobby of the city of Aurora’s Developmen­t Services building, 77 S. Broadway, in downtown Aurora.

While work has yet to begin on the subdivisio­n – Nicor officials said they hope to start digging in April, and get the volunteers who help build Habitat houses working by July or August – Beyers said the display should stay up throughout the building of the subdivisio­n, for at least two years.

In addition to explaining how the different energy-efficient elements will work in the individual houses, the display also stresses the importance of the work Aurora is doing to become a Smart City.

Beyers said it is that work that makes it possible for the smart neighborho­od.

Aurora has created an Innovation District for the area, and has its own fiber system, run by the not-forprofit OnLight Aurora, another partner in the project. Aurora also has made a commitment to developing connectivi­ty for all in the city, working to get grants to provide broadband as a utility.

That connectivi­ty “enables the smart neighborho­od,” Beyers said.

“The connectivi­ty is important – building up infrastruc­ture to support the elements in the homes,” she said.

Some of the elements that will be in the individual homes are solar panels on the roofs to provide electricit­y for the houses, and a battery storage system to collect surplus energy for use later.

The houses will include smart thermostat­s using Wi-Fi to manage the houses’

ventilatio­n, heating and cooling. The smart electrical panel allows homeowners to monitor their energy use. The panel also will allow companies like Nicor to get data on how the different systems are working, Beyers said.

The Aurora project has already spurred a second one, not exactly the same but similar, of 13 houses in Carpenters­ville, to be built

by Habitat for Humanity of Northern Fox Valley.

Together, the project will give Nicor 30 houses in which to test its energy-efficient elements.

“More and more, we understand that we need affordable energy that people can understand,” Beyers said.

Beyers understand­s that the 30 houses seem like a drop in the bucket

compared to what is needed to develop wide-spread energy efficiency that will make a difference. But she said it is a start, an understand­ing that every effort being made can make a difference.

“There isn’t a silver bullet” to eradicate climate change, she said. “Efficiency, that’s where you start.”

 ?? STEVE LORD/THE BEACON-NEWS ?? Meena Beyers, Nicor vice president of business and community developmen­t, points to elements of the houses being built in the Habitat Green Freedom subdivisio­n in Aurora. The elements are part of a display explaining how the “smart neighborho­od” works at the city’s Developmen­t Services building in downtown Aurora.
STEVE LORD/THE BEACON-NEWS Meena Beyers, Nicor vice president of business and community developmen­t, points to elements of the houses being built in the Habitat Green Freedom subdivisio­n in Aurora. The elements are part of a display explaining how the “smart neighborho­od” works at the city’s Developmen­t Services building in downtown Aurora.

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