Major EU funding for energy-harvesting project
Consortium involving Cardiff University academics will develop energy-harvesting façade to retrofit existing buildings as part of ¤6m Horizon 2020 project. An international consortium of researchers from across Europe, including academics at Cardiff University, have received ¤6m in funding from the European Commission to develop a next-generation, energy-harvesting façade to retrofit existing buildings. The aim of the four-year 'PLUG-N-HARVEST' project will be to create an energy efficient building façade with the ability to harvest solar energy and convert it into either electricity or heat, for use in the building itself or nearby buildings. By harvesting renewable energy, it is hoped the technology will help to significantly reduce our reliance on traditional energy resources, such as coal and gas, and also help to lower energy bills. Researchers from Cardiff University's Welsh School of Architecture have been awarded ¤399,085 as part of the project, and will work on a range of research tasks including system performance optimisation and evaluation, and modelling different façade configuration scenarios to figure out how it can be used most efficiently in different climates across Europe. Once the façade has been developed, it will be tested in four different multi-building pilots in Germany, Spain, Greece and the UK. The Horizon 2020 project will bring together 13 partners in Greece, Germany, Spain, Romania and UK, including universities, industry partners and local authorities - including Cardiff City Council.