Acre Designs to build KC’s first ‘net-zero’ home
July 9, 2015 | Bobby Burch
A local design and architecture firm is building the Kansas City metro’s first net-zero home that will serve as a test lab for innovators aiming to create new smart home technologies.
Acre Designs is now wrapping up design plans of its “Axiom House,” a 1,650 square-foot, solar-powered home that eventually will serve as a test lab and temporary home for the company’s founders.
The home, which is slated to be built in Kansas City in the spring of 2016, will feature about 40 different types of sensors to gauge efficiency and use by occupants, Acre co-founder Andrew Dickson said. Sensors will track such information as temperature, humidity, lighting, occupancy and other metrics to offer Acre more insight to the design to improve the home’s function.
Co-founders and spouses Andrew and Jen Dickson plan to live in the home with their two daughters to tweak its design before they open the home up for rent to startups that want to tinker with its technology.
“We’re signing up to be our own lab rats,” Andrew Dickson said. “This is going to be a laboratory and we’re breaking new ground with it. … The purpose of the home is to test a few things we are trying and improve it before we go to the general populous.”
Based in Kansas City, Kan., Acre builds environmentally-conscious, net-zero homes with alternative materials and energy sources. In addition to an array of sensors, the four-bedroom, two-bath house will also feature ample natural light, a grass-paved driveway and a separate office building with a roof-top garden and deck.
Traditionally, net-zero homes cost upwards for $600,000, Dickson said. Acre’s 1,650 square-foot model costs about $200,000, he said.
The home will be built on a double lot at 4429 State Line Road, Kansas City, Mo., across the street from the company’s current office space. Construction of the home should be wrapped up in about two months, Dickson added.
Dickson said that Kansas City’s startup community has been particularly helpful in gaining early traction. Acre now is located in the Kansas City Startup Village and is currently in Digital Sandbox KC’s program to advance its business.
“We’re trying to disrupt a pretty old and stable industry,” Dickson said. “We want to be around other people that are trying to do that, too. We also want to tap into some of the tech talent and energy here.”
Featured Business
2015 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Pure Pitch Rally reveals competitors for its 10th crowd-funded, spot-cash pitch contest
Eight emerging startups set to take the Pure Pitch Rally stage next month will become part of the Kansas City tech community’s evolving story, said Karen Fenaroli, touting a decade of impact that has seen millions in follow-on capital raised and thousands of jobs created across the region. “It is no longer just an event,”…
Sisters brew backyard-style beers from a historic firehouse in Budweiser territory
Editor’s note: The following story was produced through a paid partnership with MOSourceLink, which boasts a mission to help entrepreneurs and small businesses across the state of Missouri grow and succeed by providing free, easy access to the help they need — when they need it. [divide] SPRINGFIELD, Mo. — A midlife career crisis took…
LISTEN: Meet the partners behind Plug and Play Topeka’s growth (and impact)
On a special episode of Startland News’ 12-part podcast series diving deeper into Plug and Play, we explore how the Topeka-based program and its partners work to turn bold ideas into Kansas success stories. Guests includes Bret Lanz from Kansas State University’s Technology Development Institute; John G. Brown of StenCo; and Cole Ahlvers from NQV8…