Before & After: Redbrick Developers Passive House
This Brooklyn Heights Greek Revival Rowhouse lived a number of lives since it was originally built in 1846. Since 1951, the family of architect Herbert Kaufman owned the home, until our client purchased it. The Kaufmans used the home as a three-family building with an owner's triplex on the lower floors and two through-floor apartments above.
Our renovation provided the opportunity to go further than converting the building from three- to one-family. Alongside an incredible team, we designed Redbrick Passive House. The home is incredibly healthy, quiet, and well0buillt, resulting in Passive House certification. Passive certified homes are sealed from most bugs and dust, have filtered fresh air 24/7, serene interiors due to triple-glazed windows, and need almost no heat.
RedBrick Developers Passive House included reproportioning a number of exterior additions to create a single, wide, light-filled space to house a large kitchen. Originally, the owner’s kitchen was a small space in an extended corner of the parlor floor. The new kitchen spans the entire parlor floor in a newly designed extension. Atop the new kitchen extension, the primary suite includes a private terrace.
We restored the intact front facade and added Passive House simulated double hung windows, which allows light to pour into the restored parlor floor. The house also includes an elevator that spans from the cellar to the rooftop deck with NYC views.
This project was an incredible collaborative effort that included:
Redbrick Developers
Nadia Bartolucci of Douglas Elliman
Kleen Construction, General Contractor
bldgtyp, Passive House Consultants
Celin Munoz, Structural Engineer
RJD Engineering, Mechanical Engineer
Keron Sheridan, Staging Company
Photography: VHT Studios