Interview: Deborah Moelis and Lois Arena, Passive House's Dynamic High Rise Duo
A highlight of the Passive House Canada Conference in Toronto last week was the plenary session presented by Lois Arena of Steven Winter Associates and Deborah Moelis of Handel Architects. This engineer-architect dynamic duo has been a driving force behind a wave of pioneering high rise Passive House buildings in North America, including the student housing tower at Cornell Tech’s NYC campus, the high-end residential Winthrop Center in Boston, the affordable housing community Sendero Verde in East Harlem, and the student residence at University of Toronto Scarborough (site of the Passive House Canada Conference this year).
Their talk, “Passive House on a Large Scale,” charted the team’s learning curve, shared lessons learned, and encouraged new practitioners to jump in and get their hands dirty: an inspiring, can-do message. Passive House Accelerator’s Michael Ingui and I were pleased to get the chance to sit down with Lois and Deborah for this chat.
Zack: You guys are Passive House rock stars, and you’re doing some of the most significant projects around anywhere, certainly in North America. One of the themes that really shone through in your presentation was that everyone can do it, and that you have this journey that started with Cornell Tech, and has since moved on to new projects. Maybe you could start with how your journey in Passive House has been and what advice you have for others.
Lois: It’s been quite the journey. It’s almost like everybody involved in these groundbreaking projects, you’re almost like research scientists. Someone’s throwing a problem at you and you’re like, we can figure that out. Everybody has the same mentality: “We can figure that out.” That’s what we do. We’re problem solvers. And it’s really step by step: What’s the problem and how do we get, not around it, but how do we address it? And sometimes there’s no direct way, there’s no direct example, and you need a waiver or a bye on that for this time around, but everybody knows that that needs to be addressed. This lack of information or lack of equipment has allowed industries to step up and to bring new projects into the market where we’re lacking.
Some areas are still lacking, but some have exploded. There’s been this great growth in a really short period of time. In six years, we’ve seen changes in windows and thermal break materials, ideas, and solutions. It’s been an exponential growth in knowledge, I think. That’s my perspective.
Michael: Yeah, I feel the same. It’s pretty amazing.
It’s kind of insane to think that the work that we’re doing, that we’re all doing here at this conference, has a potential to really change the world.
Deborah: I would echo everything that Lois was saying. I’m not a scientist. It was not my life’s dream to do this work. It was something I discovered pretty late in life, but it just changed my life. It’s changed the way I interact with my own kids, and I feel I can now really have an effect on potentially doing my part to actually help the world. It’s kind of insane to think that the work that we’re doing, that we’re all doing here at this conference, has a potential to really change the world. We’re doing our part. We’re trying. And, for me, that’s been such an amazing part of the journey, and completely a surprise. This whole thing is quite a surprise to me.
I was not a person that signed up for this. It really came to me, but it became something that I got a passion for, and now it’s just my way of really trying to help solve the problem. It’s fantastic. It’s such a great opportunity for us that there’s something we can do because you can’t just sit idle. We actually have something that we can do to change this problem. We are like the snowplows. We’re just paving the way for other people to do it behind us. And there’s no reason why they won’t.
You know, LEED, when it started, everyone was all crazed about LEED. And now it’s completely business as usual, and the same thing will happen here. So, I think just being able to have an impact on the world…how incredible!
Lois: It’s humbling, isn’t it?
Deborah: It’s such an incredible opportunity.
Lois: Being invited to a conference to speak, to share your knowledge, you’re like, “Me?” Like, “Me?” You want me to come talk to you? Okay. All right. I’ll come. But it’s very humbling, actually. It’s lovely. It’s quite lovely.
Deborah: It’s really incredible. Everyone’s so open and I feel like sharing is so important. And being able to have something that you can share, that people really want, is just such an honor. I really have to give credit to my company for giving me the space to learn this, even if we have not been terribly profitable…
[Laughter]
Zack: The hazards of being on the bleeding edge.
Deborah: Right.
Michael: But it makes a difference for everybody else coming after you…they’ve learned so much, which is crazy when you think about what you’ve done. There are so many people who are learning from you. Openly sharing—like you just did and have done in other presentations—your knowledge so that others coming after you aren’t going to make the mistakes that you learned from is very important, and all the solutions that you’ve tried hard, probably very painfully, to create…it’s been very nice to see. You guys have been very open about sharing your info.
Lois: Thank you. We try to be.
Deborah: I think that’s the community we’ve fostered. I think also the community, the Passive House community, is very open and very sharing.
Lois: I agree.
Deborah: I think that’s the only way that all this…somewhat complex knowledge can be disseminated.