the way we live

thin-film solar farm

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germany has just opened the world’s first thin-film solar farm.  what sets thin-film apart from traditional photovoltaics cells is in how they create the cell.  traditional pv cells require ultra-high quality crystalline silicon wafers to be grown which is both highly labor intensive and time consuming.  thing-film pv cells, originally developed by first solar, do not require this ultra-high quality silicon.  additionally, as the name suggests, they are extremely flexible and plyable (see below).  in fact, recent advancements in pv technologies have allowed some thin-film pv cells to actually be printed on otherwise non-pv surfaces.  this technology can allow for traditional roofing materials, windows, or standard walls to become photovoltaic cells without requiring special materials, obstucting views, or alter aesthetics.

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nonetheless, the new plant in germany has 90,000 solar modules and will generate 5.7 million kilowatt hours every year on only 16.5 acres of land (718,740 square feet); this is enough power for 1,900 homes.  juwi solar, the company who has produced this solar farm, already has a 40 megawatt facility under construction that will house 550,000 modules and be operational in 2009.

8 April 2007 Posted by Geoff | green, society | | No Comments

intern architects in hell

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this is probably one of the funniest blogs i’ve ever come across.  called intern architects in hell, the site documents some ridiculously funny situations/conversations between an intern architect and the rest of the firm’s employees trough a sketched cartoon medium.  really, it’s worth scrolling through the backlog of old cartoons.  i couldn’t help but laugh at how true some of the conversations are.  this site seems more accurate than the banana republic advertising we discussed was.  there are more “guide” sites here.

8 April 2007 Posted by Geoff | architecture | | No Comments