• DocumentCode
    2918041
  • Title

    Sustainable community development: Westwood solar furnace project

  • Author

    Brown, Andrew ; Teipel, E. ; Litchfield, Kaitlin ; Gilmore, Leigh

  • Author_Institution
    Metropolitan State Univ., St. Paul, MN, USA
  • fYear
    2013
  • fDate
    20-23 Oct. 2013
  • Firstpage
    421
  • Lastpage
    425
  • Abstract
    This paper presents a humanitarian engineering project in Denver, Colorado´s Westwood community. Under the guidance of Dr. Bernard Amadei, a team of graduate students from the University of Colorado created a simple and helpful technology solution for the community that could alleviate an identified problem common for households in Westwood. This paper presents the project through all the steps: community appraisal, analysis, problem identification, strategy planning, implementation and a plan for monitoring and evaluation. The team identified the financial burden of high energy bills on the residents of the community as a pervasive problem that could be alleviated with a simple design, the solar furnace, a box built using recycled aluminum cans, plywood and acrylic plastic that heats the house through the conversion of solar energy into warm air. To demonstrate the technology, the students constructed and tested a solar furnace unit, implemented a pilot test at Re:Vision´s (a local NGO working in Westwood) office, held a focus group with community leaders (“promotoras”) for discussion about the pilot unit, calculated energy and cost savings for the design, and developed a plan to continue the project from pilot stage to community implementaion. The paper addresses the capacity and risk analysis for this design, the design itself, the implementation plan, the monitoring and evaluation plan which are the natural next steps in the project.
  • Keywords
    furnaces; risk analysis; solar energy concentrators; strategic planning; sustainable development; University of Colorado; Westwood community; Westwood solar furnace project; analysis step; capacity analysis; community appraisal step; high energy bills; humanitarian engineering project; implementation step; monitoring-and-evaluation step; problem identification step; risk analysis; solar energy conversion; solar furnace unit; strategy planning step; sustainable community development; technology solution; Aluminum; Communities; Furnaces; Materials; Monitoring; Solar heating;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Global Humanitarian Technology Conference (GHTC), 2013 IEEE
  • Conference_Location
    San Jose, CA
  • Print_ISBN
    978-1-4799-2401-1
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/GHTC.2013.6713723
  • Filename
    6713723