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    <title>Outdoor Japan</title>
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	      <title>Going off the grid in Niseko</title>
		  <desciption><![CDATA[<p><strong>Going off the grid in Niseko</strong><br />
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<img alt="" src="/uploaded/Image/magazines/issue21/Going_off_the_grid_in_Niseko_1.jpg" />Japanese concrete buildings constructed in the 1980s and apartment blocks built on ski resorts &ndash; two of the least likely settings, you might think, for eco-friendly construction. Yet these are the key ingredients in what will be one of Hokkaido&rsquo;s first environmentally sustainable building developments: the Niseko Powerhouse.<br />
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Located in the Higashiyama area of Niseko, the Niseko Powerhouse  consists of a refurbished concrete hotel, originally built for the  Hokkaido electricity authority staff, and 36 newly constructed boutique  apartments. It will be fitted with some of the most advanced  energy-saving technologies in Japan.<br />
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&ldquo;Niseko Powerhouse will be an intelligent design that uses new, and some  very old, technologies to draw as little energy from the power grid as  possible,&rdquo; says Simon Jackson, Director at Ridge Runner Architectural  Design &amp; Development, the Japanese company responsible for the  project.</p>
<p><img width="224" height="160" alt="" src="/uploaded/Image/magazines/issue21/Going_off_the_grid_in_Niseko_2.jpg" />The development is being marketed as environmentally sustainable  winter ski and summer sports holiday homes. The developers are looking  at ways to include solar power, heat exchange systems, road heating that  uses geothermal hot spring energy. Solar panels and passive solar  design, where buildings are constructed to make the best use of the sun  for heating and cooling, will be an integral part of the Niseko  Powerhouse. <br />
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&ldquo;There is a scramble to  build new homes for the overseas visitors discovering Niseko, which we  think is an opportunity to make a break from traditional energy- hungry  building methods and shift toward the sustainable technologies we will  use to build the Niseko Powerhouse,&rdquo; says Ridge Runner President Tadashi  Sasaki.</p>
<p><img alt="" src="/uploaded/Image/magazines/issue21/Going_off_the_grid_in_Niseko_5.jpg" />Despite having abundant geothermal energy, Japan makes little use of its  natural hot water except for bathing. The Niseko Powerhouse will use  boiling hot onsen water not only to fill the baths in each of the 36  boutique apartments but also to heat the complex during Hokkaido&rsquo;s  sub-zero winters.<br />
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The developers are also considering turning to some Japanese  technology from the Heinen Period (800 A.D.) to provide natural air  conditioning. Storing winter snow in building basements, such as in  traditional Japanese himuro (ice houses), will provide natural cool  airflows against the 30&ordm;C summer heat.<br />
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The Niseko Powerhouse will  be showcased to the world during the G8 Summit in nearby Lake Toya in  July this year and completed by the end of 2008.</p>
<p><strong>The Niseko Powerhouse</strong><br />
Higashiyama, Niseko, Hokkaido<br />
<a target="_blank" href="http://www.nisekopowerhouse.com">www.nisekopowerhouse.com</a><br />
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<em>For more information on resort properties in Japan, visit Japan Property Listings.</em></p>
<p><img alt="" src="/uploaded/Image/magazines/issue21/Going_off_the_grid_in_Niseko_3.jpg" /><img alt="" src="/uploaded/Image/magazines/issue21/Going_off_the_grid_in_Niseko_4.jpg" /></p>]]></desciption>	
	      <author><![CDATA[Jeff Roberts]]></author>
	      <pubDate>Fri, 23 Jul 2010 13:53:21 +0000</pubDate>
	      <link>http://www.outdoorjapan.com/magazine/column_rss/150</link>
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