Comment on Daily discussion thread: 👨‍🔬 8 January, 2025

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Salvo@aussie.zone ⁨1⁊ ⁨month⁊ ago

We planned our current suburban house to be Zero Energy (8 years before it was just a Marketting term).

There were some roadblocks, especially with the Site Supervisor not understanding what we were trying to do. (He just couldn’t comprehend, and decided to make unauthorised changes because he “knew better”.

We planned no gas to site, white (heat reflective) roof, lots of insulation, AC condensers on the south (leeward) side of the house, etc. The builder had a promo on a free PowerWall and the maximum legal amount of solar for a residential property.

We even had SECCCA liaise with us to do a case study on everything we were doing and the effects on energy usage.

They tried to steal defeat from the jaws of victory at every turn. The wrong colour roof was installed, they ran gas to site and tried to bait and switch us with “Electric Assisted” hot water rather than an Electric boiler, incorrectly wired PowerWall circuits so we couldn’t take advantage of the extra power and the AC technician insisting that the Condensers had to be installed in full sun, because installing them in the shade was too much hard work for him.

There were structural issues too, but they were not related to Zero Energy.

We persevered and after they fixed all the issues, we ended up with a 10 star house.

Nowadays (or recently, before the building industry crash), Zero Energy and a rating above 7 stars are table stakes for a builder and most are happy if the customer pays a bit more to boost it to 8 or 9 stars.

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