Zero Emission Affordable Housing Design: Palm City Transit Village

National Community Renaissance

Recipient

Rancho Cucamonga, CA

Recipient Location

29th

Senate District

50th

Assembly District

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Active

Project Status

Project Update

Since project kick-off in October 2024, the team has focused primarily on achieving design milestones across all disciplines. Subcontractors for mechanical, electrical, and plumbing have been successfully onboarded and detailed design work has commenced. Arup has led several successful design workshops to ensure full integration and collaboration between disciplines and subcontractors. All work thus far will contribute to deliverables scoped for Task 2, Pre-Installation and Design Review.

The Issue

California must simultaneously address a housing crisis and a climate crisis. Yet as developers and builders rush to add high-quality housing units, the adoption of high-energy efficiency design strategies, all-electric builds, and clean energy technology in multifamily housing has lagged. While the anticipated decarbonization benefits of these approaches are evident, a post-COVID economy with high material and labor costs, coupled with a lack of sector knowledge, has heightened a sense of risk for new approaches. These sensitivities are especially acute in affordable housing developments. Demonstration of successful projects and practical knowledge are needed to catalyze implementation at scale, and drive deep decarbonization in multifamily housing, ultimately fostering more sustainable and cost-effective housing across California.

Project Innovation

Palm City Transit Village will be a new, mixed-use, fully affordable, all-electric community in San Diego aimed at revolutionizing housing in the face of California's climate and housing challenges. Featuring 288 units, the project will integrate cutting-edge, low-carbon technologies and advanced materials to advance building decarbonization and accelerate progress in the state's housing sector. The project aims to establish and validate the cost-effectiveness of integrating advanced energy technologies within the standard design and engineering framework for a new-construction, multifamily housing development. This involves the practical application of high-efficiency design strategies and all-electric, grid-responsive technologies expected to replace conventional fossil-fuel dependent systems in affordable housing. The project will focus on the operational phase post-construction to confirm the anticipated cost an energy savings for both property management and residents, thus providing a robust case for the financial viability of such sustainable building practices. Project knowledge will be transferred to policy makers, academics, builders, developers, property managers, and other stakeholders advance lower costs, replicability, and a deeper understanding of building decarbonization address California’s parallel housing and climate crises. The team behind the Palm City Transit Village development boasts extensive combined experience building 100 percent affordable, all-electric, zero net energy mixed-use projects.

Project Goals

Demonstrate Deployment and Operational Cost Effectiveness
Demonstrate Feasibility and Market Readiness
Demonstrate Benefits
Transfer Knowledge and Support Policies

Project Benefits

The proposed design will make Palm City Transit Village carbon-free by utilizing cutting-edge energy technologies and design approaches, underpinned by comprehensive resident engagement. This building project will demonstrate scalable decarbonization strategies and model the future of housing in California.

Greater Reliability

Reliability

The project will result in the ratepayer benefits of greater electricity reliability, lower costs, and increased safety. PCTV will enhance reliability by being highly energy efficient, thus reducing load compared to a similar-sized building. It will utilize rooftop PV and energy storage to reduce grid energy usage, especially during peak periods, and ensure a minimum level of electricity access.

Increase Safety

Safety

Residents will be safer thanks to an in-building microgrid with islanding capability, to offer emergency power during outages, resilience for when power is restored, and space conditioned areas of refuge during heat events. Because there is no on-site combustion of natural gas, interior air quality will be higher.

Lower Costs

Affordability

Residents will enjoy lower direct energy costs thanks to high efficiency lighting, space conditioning, and appliances - especially demand-response based, load shifting water heating. Because the building is fully electric, residents will have no gas bill. High efficiency is of particular importance as San Diego County has the highest electricity rates in the continental US, and by far the highest in California.

Consumer Appeal

Consumer Appeal

The project will lead to technological advancement and breakthroughs to overcome barriers to the achievement of California's statutory energy goals by demonstrating and validating cutting-edge clean energy technologies and design methodologies in a multifamily mixed-use development. The public interest investment will produce data on feasibility and cost-effectiveness, performance of high energy efficiency design, and all-electric infrastructure.

Key Project Members

Project Member

Tim Kohut

Director of Sustainable Design
National CORE

Contact the Team

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