flexiblefullpage -
billboard - default
interstitial1 - interstitial
catfish1 - bottom
Currently Reading

BIPV and solar technology is making its mark in the industry

Building Technology

BIPV and solar technology is making its mark in the industry

AEC teams get imaginative with the latest BIPV technology.    


By C.C. Sullivan, Contributing Editor | February 28, 2022
Sustainability Pavilion
Buro Happold and Grimshaw collaborated to design the massive BIPV installation at Terra – The Sustainability Pavilion, which opened to the public in 2021 as part of the Expo 2020 Dubai, UAE. Courtesy Expo 2020 Dubai.

Increasingly, building teams are comparing the use of building-integrated photovoltaic (BIPV) systems for façades, roofs, and other architectural assemblies with a promising and much easier alternative: conventional solar panel arrays, either on their building or off-site, to supplement their resiliency and decarbonization efforts. Recent examples include a tech company headquarters in Silicon Valley and a university in Arizona. In both cases, the project teams chose to expand their solar farms in nearby locations rather than use integrated PV technologies.

A growing group, however, is working harder. They are making BIPV an integral part of their latest green building works, contributing to a market expanding at about 15 percent per year. From the cascading glass skylights at the Edmonton Convention Center and the PV roof array overhanging the Bullitt Center in Seattle, to the new curved pavilion created for Dubai Expo and the modern PV façade at the University of Washington, creative applications generating ample electric loads are found worldwide, according to maker Onyx Solar.

“BIPV applications are challenging, and location and context are key to their early evaluations,” says John Ivanoff, an Associate Principal with Buro Happold’s façades and specialty structures team. “Arizona has more sunny days than Alaska or Maine. In some cities, there are recent code changes, such as in New York, where if the roof exceeds a certain area, the project team is required to evaluate the use of PV on the building.”

In urban contexts, neighboring buildings may cast excessive shadows, so the site itself is another aspect of the analysis, adds Ivanoff, who has worked on various innovative BIPV projects including Terra – The Sustainability Pavilion, which opened to the public in 2021 as one of the top three attractions of the Expo 2020 Dubai, UAE.

“BIPV is a challenge because the solar panels work best when on a slight angle, and vertical glass applications don’t always harness the sun in a direct enough way,” says Mark Rhoads, AIA, LEED AP, Associate Principal with Grimshaw, the architecture firm that designed Terra. “So the biggest challenges arise in applying BIPV to non-roof conditions.”

When Grimshaw and Buro Happold collaborated on Dubai’s Sustainability Pavilion, the recently completed educational venue for the client, Expo 2020 Dubai, the stakes were high. Promoting ecology, sustainable technologies, and green design, the project’s core building offers 86,000 sf of exhibition space that includes an auditorium, courtyard, and reservoir. “Soaring over the courtyard, the pavilion’s canopy accommodates more than 64,600 sf (6,000 sm) of ultra-efficient monocrystalline photovoltaic cells embedded in glass panels,” according to Grimshaw’s design team. “The combination of the cell and the glass casing allow the building to harness solar energy while providing shade and daylighting to the visitors below.”

Drawing inspiration from complex natural processes like photosynthesis, the deployable freestanding shade structures are constructed from steel and complex composites, structurally optimized to support an 18-meter photovoltaic array to harvest solar energy. Like a sunflower, the array rotates 180 degrees to follow the sun throughout the course of the day, maximizing energy yield and boosting solar cell efficiency. The bespoke trapezoidal panels employ highly efficient monocrystalline PV cells, embedded within three layers of glass, providing shade below without casting severe shadows or blocking views to the sky.

THE LATEST IN BIPV TECHNOLOGY

PUMA Plaza Facade
BIPV applications include window walls, skylights, sunshading, canopies, and safety glazed balustrades. Pictured: PUMA Plaza Iso-Glass Façade, Herzogenaurach, Germany. PHOTOS: Vitro Architectural Glass, Solarvolt

Public Safety Building Salt Lake City

Monocrystalline solar cells represent one of four basic BIPV technologies, according to Vitro Solarvolt, a BIPV maker: “It renders a black appearance on solar cells with maximum energy-generation performance, while polycrystalline PV delivers a striking blue appearance with slightly reduced performance,” and it can be less expensive, as well. To provide a patterned appearance and higher visible light transmission (VLT) while retaining some of the energy generation benefits of monocrystalline PV, striped monocrystalline PV offers another option.

Buro Happold’s Ivanoff adds that thin film PV may be suitable for some applications. Thin films require less material, are generally cheaper but result in lower in efficiencies—110-130 peak watts per square meter (Wp/m2) versus 200 Wp/m2 for monocrystalline and 160 Wp/m2 for polycrystalline. Two thin film technologies can be integrated with glass—amorphous silicon (A-Si) and copper indium gallium selenide (CIGS)—and a third, cadmium telluride (CdTe), works for opaque panels. Vitro notes that BIPV glass panels can be used with spandrel glass, as well as low-emissivity (low-e) coatings and glass substrates, including tinted glass. Printed glass shingles are also well-established on the market, says Ivanofff, with surfaces that may be printed to look like other materials such as with a faux brick finish. Customized colored glass, he adds, is increasingly attractive to building teams.

Both Rhoads and Ivanoff stress that glass safety and fire performance should be considered, especially in horizontal and angled applications: “These are electronic elements, and in the UK, the Netherlands, and some U.S. jurisdictions it is regulated for fire safety,” says Rhoads. “Overheating is another issue in operations.” In addition to glass panels, other ways to integrate BIPV include vertically mounted high-performance panels, PV-covered louvers or shades—if those offer sufficient surface area—and street furniture integrated with PV panels, such as the bus shelters and sidewalk shade structures in Los Angeles, Singapore, and some Texas cities, says Ivanoff.

Skylights BIPV armature
Skylights are seen as the ideal BIPV armature. The pharmaceutical giant Novartis opened its headquarters building a few years ago with the largest BIPV skylight in the world. Courtesy Rafael Viñoly Architects.

In many cases, however, skylights are seen as the ideal BIPV armature. The pharmaceutical giant Novartis opened its headquarters building a few years ago with the largest BIPV skylight in the world. “The photovoltaic skylight covers 27,500 square feet and consists of hundreds of large transparent photovoltaic glass units developed by Onyx Solar,” according to Power Engineering International, which worked with architect Rafael Viñoly Architects to complete the project. These horizontal and low-slope applications, including roof windows and solar cell covers for simple pedestrian shelters, perform optimally only when maintained well, says Grimshaw’s Rhoads: “Cleanliness is an important consideration. If your cells get covered in dust, the panels lose efficiency exponentially. So maintenance is key to keep them clean,” he explains, noting that the Dubai Expo panels are cleaned almost daily. Ivanoff adds that robotic cleaning systems used in desert solar arrays and on some new towers—along with dedicated maintenance crews—are important players in the drive to optimize efficiencies and yield of PV cells on BIPV systems over the life of the buildings.

In spite of the obstacles, Rhoads expects BIPV applications to expand as the technology becomes more ubiquitous and easy to specify. “These systems create a nice transparent condition,” he says, “and they are as integrated as possible since they power their buildings, bringing us closer to net-zero operations.”

Related Stories

Giants 400 | Nov 14, 2022

4 emerging trends from BD+C's 2022 Giants 400 Report

Regenerative design, cognitive health, and jobsite robotics highlight the top trends from the 519 design and construction firms that participated in BD+C's 2022 Giants 400 Report.

Contractors | Nov 14, 2022

U.S. construction firms lean on technology to manage growth and weather the pandemic

In 2021, Gilbane Building Company and Nextera Robotics partnered in a joint venture to develop an artificial intelligence platform utilizing a fleet of autonomous mobile robots. The platform, dubbed Didge, is designed to automate construction management, maximize reliability and safety, and minimize operational costs. This was just one of myriad examples over the past 18 months of contractor giants turning to construction technology (ConTech) to gather jobsite data, manage workers and equipment, and smooth the construction process.

University Buildings | Nov 13, 2022

University of Washington opens mass timber business school building

Founders Hall at the University of Washington Foster School of Business, the first mass timber building at Seattle campus of Univ. of Washington, was recently completed. The 84,800-sf building creates a new hub for community, entrepreneurship, and innovation, according the project’s design architect LMN Architects.

Sponsored | Steel Buildings | Nov 7, 2022

Steel structures offer faster path to climate benefits

Faster delivery of buildings isn’t always associated with sustainability benefits or long-term value, but things are changing. An instructive case is in the development of steel structures that not only allow speedier erection times, but also can reduce embodied carbon and create durable, highly resilient building approaches.

Mass Timber | Aug 30, 2022

Mass timber construction in 2022: From fringe to mainstream

Two Timberlab executives discuss the market for mass timber construction and their company's marketing and manufacturing strategies. Sam Dicke, Business Development Manager, and Erica Spiritos, Director of Preconstruction, Timberlab, speak with BD+C's John Caulfield. 

Green | Jul 26, 2022

Climate tech startup BlocPower looks to electrify, decarbonize the nation's buildings

The New York-based climate technology company electrifies and decarbonizes buildings—more than 1,200 of them so far.

Building Technology | Jun 9, 2022

GSA Green Proving Ground program selects six innovative building technologies for evaluation

The U.S. General Services Administration’s (GSA) Green Proving Ground program, in collaboration with the U.S. Department of Energy, has selected six innovative building technologies for evaluation in GSA’s inventory.

Smart Buildings | Jun 1, 2022

Taking full advantage of smart building technology

Drew Deatherage of Crux Solutions discusses where owners and AEC firms could do better at optimizing smart technology in building design and operations.

Sponsored | BD+C University Course | May 10, 2022

Design guide for parapets: Safety, continuity, and the building code

This course covers design considerations for parapets. The modern parapet must provide fire protection, serve as a fall-protective guard, transition and protect the roof/facade interface, conceal rooftop equipment, and contribute to the aesthetic character of the building. 

Sponsored | BD+C University Course | May 10, 2022

Designing smarter places of learning

This course explains the how structural steel building systems are suited to construction of education facilities.

boombox1 - default
boombox2 -
native1 -

More In Category




halfpage1 -

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021