Harmony Commons at the University of Toronto Scarborough
Harmony Commons at the University of Toronto Scarborough is the largest Passive House project in Canada and the largest Passive House dormitory in the world.
Harmony Commons at the University of Toronto Scarborough is at the centerpiece of the northward expansion of the University’s 300-acre campus. Designed to house 746 students and supportive resident advisors, the building also serves the wider campus with its first full dining hall as well as central offices that serve student life and campus security.
Taking advantage of the natural surroundings, the building has been sited and shaped so that as many occupied spaces as possible feel a connection to the outside. A preserved, historic grove of trees to the north becomes a focal point for many of the units, common rooms, and the large dining hall at ground level.
The new student residences are Passive House certified, making Harmony Commons the largest Passive House project in Canada and the largest Passive House dormitory in the world.
The new Student Residences are Passive House certified, the most rigorous sustainability standard in the world.
When compared to similar dormitories on the UTSC campus, Harmony Commons consumes 70% less energy and contributes 90% less greenhouse gas emissions per person in peak conditions. Energy consumption is reduced thanks to a high-performance envelope, low-energy systems, and heat recovery from ventilation exhaust and wastewater. The all-electric systems allow emissions reductions to outperform reductions in energy consumption, taking advantage of Ontario’s increasingly renewable electricity grid. Even with a commercial kitchen serving 3,000+ meals per day, Harmony Commons has zero on-site fossil fuel combustion.
The building’s aluminum cladding, inspired by Scarborough’s geography, reduces its verticality and creates an informal, domestic feel.
Harmony Commons is designed to center the wellness of students, the community, and the environment.
The building is designed to offer a variety of uses, with public spaces at the ground level including a servery, dining hall, peer resources, flexible event spaces, and offices.
The building includes the campus' first all-campus servery which serves roughly 3,000 meals per day.
Dormitory rooms are arranged in clusters or “communities,” each having their own identity.
The sculpted nature of the building’s form was driven by this concept of student communities. Each community is afforded private study spaces, gathering spaces and a common kitchen for planned or impromptu interactions.
Harmony Commons: Sustainable Student Living
Read more about the real world performance of Harmony Commons after one year of operations.
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