Disappear Retreat MN, Grand Marais Residential Development, US prefabricated house, American architecture images

Disappear Retreat in Grand Marais, Minnesota

American Residential Building Project in Minnesota design by COULSON, USA

Nov 14, 2018

Architects: COULSON

Location: Grand Marais, MN, USA

Disappear Retreat Minnesota

Disappear Retreat in Grand Marais, Minnesota

Disappear Retreat in Grand Marais

Disappear Retreat is a transparent, star-gazing, triple-zero building, dissolving the impact on the environment physically and aesthetically.

Disappear Retreat in Grand Marais, Minnesota

This compact, prefabricated, off-grid dwelling offers an affordable, minimalist lifestyle in resources, cost, and design. The high-performance enclosure meets the Passive House Standard and will pursue Living Building Challenge certification, the two most rigorous environmental targets in the world.

The 83 sqft building requires no active heating or cooling systems and has a peak heating load of just 100 watts (1 light bulb) in the extreme cold of northern Minnesota. It performs similarly well in cold climates from Seattle to Buffalo and Chicago to Calgary. This groundbreaking design by the architecture firm COULSON strives for a paradigm shift, inspiring the public and AEC industry that low-tech, sustainable building is attainable now without sacrificing aesthetic freedom.

Disappear Retreat in Grand Marais, Minnesota

Scattered amongst the boreal forest near Grand Marais, Minnesota like a family of spotted mushrooms, the first prototype buildings will form a Retreat Center offering a non-profit residency program to artistic and scientific professionals, public outreach on sustainable building and climate change, and overnight stays for those interested in test-driving the design. Visitors will become attune to resource use and the naturally integrated sustenance from the earth and sun and gain creative rejuvenation and inspiration from the landscape. Prototype construction is underway, Spring/Summer 2018, and will undergo rigorous testing at this site before launching into production and available to the public in 2019.

Disappear Retreat in Grand Marais, Minnesota

Stargazing under a dazzling night sky, hiking in the luscious tapestry of the boreal forest, feeling a primordial desire to insinuate oneself into this nourishing place with a transparent design where the universe overhead and surrounding ecosystems press close. Disappear Retreat blends into the landscape with a jewel-like form and mirrored glass that takes on the identity of the site in its reflections (transparent ultraviolet color prevents animal collision).

A mosaic pattern of thin-film PV integrated into the south glass wall generates all the energy needs from the sun and camouflages the building into the surroundings. Three Retreat models have identical enclosures and alternative interiors. Bed+Bath has built-in sofa/bed with storage, toilet, sink, shower, refrigerator, and induction cooktop. Basic model is a flexible open plan for art, music, meditation, office, and living space. Sauna model has built-in benches and sauna heater. The mobile design fits on a standard trailer, has minimal impact on the land, and is adaptable to changes in climate, ownership, function, and economics.

Disappear Retreat in Grand Marais, Minnesota

Disappear Retreat is a zero-energy, zero-waste, zero-water facility. Using a passive design approach of super-insulation, air tightness, thermal bridge-free details, compact form, winter passive solar, and summer shading the heating load is reduced by 95%, eliminating the need for mechanical heating and cooling systems, and the energy demand is reduced by 86% before any renewable energy is applied.

This allows a very tiny photovoltaic system seamlessly integrated into the south glass wall to achieve positive-energy. An integrated plumbing system consists of grey, black, and potable water tanks, similar to an RV. The Shed houses composting and rainwater treatment systems to handle waste and water from multiple Retreat structures on-site and has a photovoltaic system for electric vehicle charging. Buildings are fully assembled in factory.

Disappear Retreat in Grand Marais, Minnesota

Disappear Retreat integrates these low-tech solutions and components into an almost invisible state, it’s not obvious it is a green building. The design is light, transparent, and seamlessly connected to the surroundings. It gives the feeling of living outdoors. It’s this attentive care in merging design with performance that is unique. The innovation is smart integration and rigorous energy modeling.

Today we have the components needed for simple, affordable, low-energy building without sacrificing aesthetics. Disappear Retreat strives to change the perception of sustainable design and connect with new audiences. Its small size makes it approachable, understandable, and transportable, maximizing public education value, while its low-tech strategies are transferrable to other scales, solutions, and locations.

Disappear Retreat in Grand Marais, Minnesota

What are the passive house measurements?
7.3 kBtu(ft2yr) 23 kWh(m2yr) pEUI before PV
-8 kBtu(ft2yr) -25 kWh(m2yr) pEUI after PV
4.4 kBtu(ft2yr) 14 kWh(m2yr) space heat demand
0.40 ACH50 pressurization test
R-87 0.065 W(m2k) floor
R-59 0.096 W(m2k) solid wall
R-32 0.176 W(m2k) glass + insulated shade

What is the project innovation?
This compact, prefabricated, off-grid dwelling offers an affordable, minimalist lifestyle in resources, cost, and design. The high-performance enclosure meets the Passive House Standard and will pursue Living Building Challenge certification, the two most rigorous environmental targets in the world. The 83 sqft building requires no active heating or cooling systems and has a peak heating load of just 100 watts (1 light bulb) in the extreme cold of northern Minnesota. It performs similarly well in cold climates from Seattle to Buffalo and Chicago to Calgary.

Disappear Retreat in Grand Marais, Minnesota

What was the catalyst for the project?
The vision for Disappear Retreat came under the night sky viewing a psychedelic show of northern lights and imagining a small, self-sufficient retreat with a glass roof where the universe overhead and surrounding ecosystems press close, where one feels connected to the planet and can sleep under the dazzling stars and dream with eyes open.

The project aims to change the perception of sustainable design and connect with new audiences. Its small size makes it approachable, understandable, and transportable, maximizing public education value, while its low-tech strategies are transferrable to other scales, solutions, and locations.

What is the approach to zero energy?
The design takes a conservation-first, keep-it-simple approach with passive solutions that drastically cut energy use.
The 8x10x9ft structure is incredibly compact, reducing exterior surface area and, therefore, unwanted heat loss or gain.

The air-tight and super-insulated enclosure will never drop below 60°F inside no matter how cold outside and without any sun exposure, so plumbing systems are always safe. Passive solar heating through the glass roof and walls is utilized in the winter, modulated in spring/fall with insulated shades, and blocked in summer by trees and shades. These strategies reduce the peak heating load to just 100 watts (1 light bulb), a 95% reduction. No mechanical heating or cooling is needed.

With the heating and cooling loads eliminated, the remaining energy demand for the Bed+Bath model is just 7 kBtu(ft2yr) (an 86% reduction compared to the Midwest average). This includes tankless electric hot water, refrigerator, ventilation, induction cooktop, LED lighting, water system, and consumer electronics assuming 1 occupant full-time with occasional guests.

This tiny energy demand is easily supplied by the off-grid photovoltaic system integrated into the south glass wall, achieving zero-energy with small battery storage. The sun provides all we need. Investing in passive, long lasting, and integrated elements like insulation means the performance will last the lifetime of the building (50+ years).

Which climate zones is Disappear Retreat designed for?
Disappear Retreat meets comfort and performance targets for Passive House and Zero-Energy in cold climate locations like Minneapolis, Duluth, Portland, Vancouver, Seattle, Toronto, Edmonton, Montreal, and Calgary. With minor adjustments to the glass solar heat gain Denver, Provo, Chicago, Madison, Buffalo, and New Haven also perform well. All Disappear Retreat locations will have a custom site and climate evaluation.

What is the approach to zero water and waste?
Under the accessible floor of the Retreat Bed+Bath is a potable water tank for sink/shower, a greywater tank for sink/shower wastewater, and a blackwater tank for toilet waste. These systems are similar to an RV and keep energy, complexity, cost, land disturbance, and floor height at its lowest.

The Shed provides composting and rainwater treatment for multiple Retreat buildings to achieve a Zero-Water Zero-Waste facility. Filling/emptying of tanks is required every 2 weeks. Tote-along portable tanks with vacuum pump can transfer waste and water, allowing a remote location of Retreat. A portable pump and hose works if Retreat and Shed are within a few hundred feet. At sites with existing septic and well or city services, Bed+Bath can connect to them, but is no longer zero water/waste.

Show more
What is the motivation for the artist Retreat Center?
The project is designed for and inspired by creative work. Art, literature, music, and poetry influence the sense of place we are striving to achieve. Exploring surreal, transcendental, nouveau, abstract, bauhaus, minimalist, classical, and experimental universes. The dwelling provides an immersion in nature to recharge the mind and creativity, allowing occupants to disappear into their work and the landscape. “I seek the power of the rock, the magic of the water, the religion of the tree, the color of the wind, and the enigma of the horizon.” -George Morrison

What is the function of the Shed?
Rainwater is collected off the Shed roof, filtered, treated, and stored in tank for potable water use onsite. All blackwater waste is treated in a composting system. A pattern of thin-film PV is integrated into the south facing roof and door panels and supplies power to the waste and water systems, electrical vehicle charging, and excess is stored in batteries for Retreat building emergency backup.

Shed uses passive solar heating through the roof eliminating need for mechanical heating and keeping waste and water systems operational in winter. The 5x7x20ft structure stores bikes, kayak, bins, and maintenance tools. It’s also ideal for winter gardening. Like Retreat, the Shed dissolves into the landscape with reflective glass, photovoltaic spots, and grey weathered wood.

What materials and products are used?
Disappear Retreat has a neutral palette of only three finish materials, creating a zen atmosphere that emphasizes the exterior views and increases the perceived sense of space as the materials flow seamlessly from interior to exterior and from floor to wall to roof. 1/4 inch thick insulated fabric shades at the roof and windows modulate heat gain, glare, acoustics, privacy, and mood. These join with a fabric upholstered wall, adding a softness and sense of comfort to the interior. The crisp glass details are balanced with the tactile warmth of the reclaimed grey weathered wood which blends with the surrounding rocks and trees.

Local reclaimed weathered cedar.
SSG Triple-pane IGU (insulated glass unit) at roof and walls. Thin film BIPV at south wall.
Aerogel Thermal Wrap at shades.
VIPs (vacuum insulated panels) at floor and walls.
LUNOS thru-wall heat recovery ventilation.
CENTOR retractable insect screen.
Hansgrohe plumbing fittings.
Alape sink.

Disappear Retreat in Grand Marais, Minnesota

Disappear Retreat, Grand Marais – Building Information

Project size: 83 ft2
Completion date: 2018
Building levels: 1
Architect, Passive House Designer, Interior Designer: COULSON

Disappear Retreat in Grand Marais, Minnesota

Photography: Carly Coulson

Disappear Retreat in Grand Marais, Minnesota images / information received from COULSON Architects, Duluth, MN, USA

Location: Duluth, Minnesota, United States of America

Minnesota Buildings

Minnesota Buildings

Fast Horse Building, Minneapolis
Design: Salmela Architect
Fast Horse Minneapolis Offices building | www.e-architect.com
photograph : Paul Crosby
Fast Horse Minneapolis Building

James I Swenson Building
Design: Ross Barney Architects
James I Swenson Building

Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, MN
Herzog & de Meuron with HGA, Inc.
Walker Art Center

Comments / photos for the Disappear Retreat in Grand MaraisMinnesota Architecture design by COULSON, USA page welcome