Back to News

Net Zero Award Goes to Academy Interdisciplinary Project

Students, alumni, and instructors from Interior Architecture & Design, Landscape Architecture, and Graphic Design won the Net Zero competition in March. The Honors Prize for energy-efficient design in Architecture came with a $10,000 prize.

A building with a glass facade and modern design stands under a bright blue sky. Birds fly in the background. The structure is flanked by white walls and green grass patches.
The “Changer” project by Academy students, alumni and instructors, plus members from two Taiwanese universities, won the student category in California’s Net Zero Energy competition.

The competition was started eight years ago by the California Public Utility Commission. It promotes the commission’s goals for all new residential and commercial construction to use net-zero energy by 2020 and 2030. There are competition levels for both professionals and students.

To the Goal & Beyond

Led by Interior Architecture & Design graduate Alex Chuang, who now lives in Taiwan, the team, called “Crezlab” (pronounced “crazy lab”), assembled last fall to tackle this year’s competition prompt: a recreation center of two attached buildings on the California State University, Monterey Bay, campus.

“I wanted to help other students gain professional experience outside of a classroom that could help them get jobs and internships,” Chuang says. He added that the project brought participants “a sense of team responsibility, goal-seeking, mutual learning and thinking.”

Interdisciplinary & International Connections

After consulting with Academy instructors Stephanie Smith-Haenel and Michael Sammet, Chuang assembled the team. They separated into two groups: one focusing on architecture and the other on interior design and landscaping. Students worked through their winter breaks to complete their project.

A group of eight people gather around a dining table with drinks and condiments, including a bottle of Tabasco sauce. One person wears a sweatshirt with "LAUGH MORE" written on it.
Some of the Academy student and alumni members of the “Changer” project team. Left to right: Ying-Chieh (Charlie) Chan, Chiao (Joyce) Han Chang, Hsin Yu (Bella) Chen, Tzu-Li (Jelly) Chiu, Ya-Chun (Judy) Yang, Alex Chuang and friends. Photo courtesy of School of Interior Architecture & Design.

The team also included students from Ming Chuan University and Chun Yuan Christian University, both in Taiwan. Academy Graphic Design graduate Linyi Guo acted as graphic design consultant for the team’s report.

Their design, titled “Changer,” had a unique inspiration—an ocean kayak. Chuang’s explanation: “The fluid dynamics and design features of the ocean kayak inform the approach to passive solar and the arrangement of solar panels on the building exterior. The idea that a kayaker achieves the most powerful and efficient stroke by minimizing excess body movement within the kayak informs efficient energy use.”

The design also incorporated such features as a fog catcher, solar panels and wind turbines, all to achieve a completely energy-efficient design. And of course the project used recyclable materials.

The jury praised the team for its energy analysis and use of sustainable strategies.

Roles & Benefits

Smith-Haenel and Sammet advised the team throughout the project, including a site visit to Monterey, Calif., in November 2018.

Sammet, who has taught sustainable design at the Academy for almost 10 years, says the experience is vital for students. “You can’t have [students] graduate without understanding how to reduce energy, water, materials and toxic chemicals in the environment and the environments they build… For 10 or 20 years, the field of architecture has been moving to this concept of net zero.”

A partially constructed building, featuring exposed steel framework, stands behind a green temporary fence, surrounded by an empty parking lot. Sparse trees and a utility pole frame the scene.
From the team’s site visit to Monterey, Calif. Photo by Yungting Hsu.

Smith-Haenel says the team’s dedication was inspiring. “The students actually took ownership,” she says, operating beyond the classroom mindset of finding the right answer. “We did treat them, in this case, more as peers than as our students…I could see the growth. There’s a huge difference from where they were in the classroom and where they are now.”

Bella Chen, an Interior Architecture & Design student, says she “learned how to work with different people from different fields and respect their profession.”

A person with a scarf gestures forward in a parking lot, surrounded by four people. Two hold drinks, while one wears a "UCLA ALUM" shirt. Green fencing and trees are visible.
Left to right: Alex Huang, Vicky Guo, Stephanie Smith-Haenel, Michael Sammet and Sherry Wang on the Monterey site visit, fall 2018. Photo by Yungting Hsu.

Team members researched case studies and analysis together and divided up the work; Chen’s responsibility was the interior floor plan and furniture layout and selection.

For Chen, her studies at the Academy prepared her well: “The first time I dealt with sustainable design, I knew a lot of sustainable strategies and how to apply them to architecture.”

Steps Ahead

When the team learned they won, members were ecstatic. With this opportunity to build their creative portfolios in tow, some students are using the money to fund their professional exams. Chuang says the plan is to enter more competitions—“all in the efforts to support the professional goals of the students.”

Modern building exterior with glass facades is surrounded by trees. Birds fly above in a clear sky. Text: "Supplementary Documentation" and "CHANGER" in stylized font.
Image courtesy Crezlab

For Smith-Haenel, the recognition affirms the Academy’s approach to cross-disciplinary collaboration. “The fact that there was so much Academy of Art at different levels speaks to the community that’s built while we’re all students,” she says.

“It lives on after you graduate and it trickles down. I always say that our alumni are everywhere—they really are.”


Article by Cristina Schreil of Academy Art U News

Academy of Art University Search Search Search Previous Next Previous Next Next Next Chat Quote Facebook Google Plus Instagram Pinterest Twitter YouTube LinkedIn TikTok WeHeartIt Download App Close