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Competition encourages college students to build zero-energy homes

A webpage with an illustration of roads and buildings
U.S. Department of Energy
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Solar Decathlon
A screenshot of the U.S. Department of Energy's Virtual Village, a homepage that showcases the homes that are part of this year's Solar Decathlon. Several universities from the Mountain West are competing this weekend in an international competition focused on building climate-smart homes.

Several universities from the Mountain West are competing this weekend in an international competition focused on building climate-smart homes.

The Solar Decathlon, funded by the U.S. Department of Energy, gives teams two years to design and build zero-energy homes powered by renewables.

Two people pose with thumbs up under an arched doorway
Dept. of Energy Solar Decathlon
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Flickr
Brigham Young University students stand inside their "triple dome home" for the Solar Decathlon competition on Jan. 9, 2023, in Provo, Utah. The teams are judged on factors like durability, environmental impact and more.

There are 10 contests in the competition, where the zero-energy homes are judged on factors including environmental impact and durability. They also undergo several tests with sensors and equipment to test functions like drying beach towels in the homes or charging an electric vehicle.

“It's very practical in some sense. Like, can your house actually perform the things that a home needs to be able to do?” Holly Carr, the director of the decathlon, said.

a tan colored dome structure with mountains in the background
Dept. of Energy Solar Decathlon
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Flickr
A triple-domed structure sits nears the mountains on Mar. 27, 2022, in Provo, Utah. Brigham Young University students created a "triple dome home" for the Solar Decathlon competition that focuses on earth berms to regulate temperature, even in extreme weather.

The competition started in 2002, when collegiate teams would bring their zero-energy home models to the National Mall in Washington D.C. Back then, powering a house entirely by solar power was a new idea.

“Zero-energy homes are not UFOs that are landing on the National Mall anymore,” Carr said. “That was true 20 years ago, but now they are feasible and beautiful and functional and can be found across the country and communities all over.”

Since then, the competition has moved toward local builds that allows teams to build a home in their town and open it for the public to see. The competition also includes some international teams. This year, teams from British Columbia and India are partaking in the competition alongside teams from across the U.S.

There are two main categories in the decathlon: design and build. The design competition lasts one to two semesters and encourages students to complete designs of commercial and residential buildings.

The build competition starts with a design, and if teams advance from the preliminary round, they receive grants to build the home and test its abilities. Then, the teams meet in a central location and “present” their homes.

A group of people stand under a ceiling of wooden beams
Dept. of Energy Solar Decathlon
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Flickr
The University of Wyoming team shows off their home for the Solar Decathlon competition to the public on March 1, 2023, in Lander, Wyoming. The students will "present" their homes to the judges using 3D models and virtual reality.

“The build challenge teams will also have 3D tours that we [the public] have taken inside and outside of all of the homes,” Carr said. “So there will be VR goggles, and jurors and student participants and faculty can all don the goggles and basically walk through each of these homes and see every nook and cranny through these virtual tours.”

This year, students from the University of Wyoming built a 2,400-square-foot, all-electric home of wood reclaimed from a 2020 wildfire. In Utah, Brigham Young University students created a triple-dome home that uses earth berms to regulate temperatures even in extreme weather.

snow-covered landscape with a home at the center
Dept. of Energy Solar Decathlon
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Flickr
An all-electric home of wood in snow-covered Lander, Wyoming on Feb. 13, 2023. The University of Wyoming students built a 2,400 square foot all-electric home of wood reclaimed from a 2020 wildfire.

A team from the University of Colorado Boulder has not built their house yet, but they will still compete with their home design.

Carr said these students are helping to build a clean energy future.

“The skills that students are gaining in the Solar Decathlon are important now more than ever as we look to transition buildings to run on clean energy and to be a part of climate solutions,” Carr said.

The Solar Decathlon awards ceremony will be livestreamed Sunday at 8 a.m. Mountain Time on the Department of Energy’s Solar Decathlon website. The public can view all the entries and tour the homes virtually at the decathlon’s virtual village website.

This story was produced by the Mountain West News Bureau, a collaboration between Wyoming Public Media, Nevada Public Radio, Boise State Public Radio in Idaho, KUNR in Nevada, the O'Connor Center for the Rocky Mountain West in Montana, KUNC in Colorado, KUNM in New Mexico, with support from affiliate stations across the region. Funding for the Mountain West News Bureau is provided in part by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.

I'm the General Assignment Reporter and Back-Up Host for KUNC, here to keep you up-to-date on news in Northern Colorado — whether I'm out in the field or sitting in the host chair. From city climate policies, to businesses closing, to the creativity of Indigenous people, I'll research what is happening in your backyard and share those stories with you as you go about your day.
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