(855) 321-7473

M-F 9am-5pm Eastern

minneapolis passive house
House Feature

Minneapolis Passive House: The Home That Makes Money

By Melissa Rappaport Schifman, Editor-At-Large
Last Updated: Feb 4, 2025

Kathryn and Chris Johnson started talking about their dream home even before they got married. Kathryn’s parents both grew up on farms, instilling in her a kind of “back to the land” sensibility. Chris remembers drawing houses with his brother for summertime entertainment in the cool basement when it was hot outside and was influenced by the energy crisis of the 1970s. 

But perhaps the biggest impact on their journey toward building their Net Zero Energy Passive House was their time visiting and living in Germany over the past 25 years, where Passive House principles are more prevalent. “We learned how Germans built homes, and a lot of the ideas struck us as much more practical and comfortable than the most common American methods."

So when the opportunity came along to build, they knew they wanted to pursue the Passive House certification. When they started the building process, they gave a name to their new home and set up a blog: SweetTreePassiveHouse (they tap the maple trees on their property to make maple syrup; they also have a crab apple tree, peach tree, and apple tree, hence the name). The beauty of this blog is its authenticity—these are two people that set their sights on building a more practical, comfortable, and beautiful home, which will happen to not have any energy bills.

Table of Contents

  1. 1. No Natural Gas
  2. 2. It’s All About the Building Envelope
  3. 3. Comfort
  4. 4. Locally Beautiful
  5. 5. Money Generating
minneapolis passive house homeowners

Rise caught up with them just days before their move-in to a brand new, soon-to-be-certified Passive House, located in a western suburb of Minneapolis. The custom-design of the home did make it more expensive. But oh, it is worth it! Why? It’s so hard to choose, but here are the five coolest features of their home.

minneapolis passive house covered patio

1. No Natural Gas

This is essential for our society’s transformation to a clean energy economy, commonly called electrification. That means no gas heater, no gas stove, no gas fireplace. How? The technology exists: induction stoves are leaps and bounds better than the old electric stoves that were hard to clean and hard to control the heat level. Electric heat pumps to cool and heat the house have become much more efficient. Hot water is heated with an AO Smith air-to-water heat pump. The benefit of no natural gas is threefold:

  • Better indoor air quality and a healthier home. First, no fossil fuel burning in the home means no carbon monoxide, nitrous oxides, volatile organic compounds, or other harmful emissions that can detrimental to your health—including no greenhouse gas emissions, which contribute to global climate change. 
  • Energy efficiency. Second, no combustion means no fumes to vent outside, eliminating the need for additional holes in the home (which would lead to a leakier house).
  • Safety. In previous homes, the Johnsons were aware of three different natural gas explosions in neighboring homes, and they frankly just wanted to make the safer choice. When you think about it, it’s a little crazy how most of us do not ever think about the highly combustible gas lines running underneath our yards and into our homes!
minneapolis passive house wall and window

2. It’s All About the Building Envelope

The central tenet of a passive house is its windows’ orientation toward the sun in order to take advantage of the sun’s free heat in the winter while having shading on that side in the summer to keep it cool. The home needs to keep that heat inside, which means the walls, windows and doors have to be super well insulated—and where they come together must be tightly sealed so there are no air leaks. The Johnson’s home accomplishes this through insulated concrete forms (ICF)—8 inches of concrete plus foam insulation + stucco = 24-inch walls. They chose German-made Muller Schreinerei triple-pane windows—aluminum on the outside and wood on the inside—rated for Passive Haus, with an astonishingly low U factor (which measures a window’s resistance to heat flow). Opening and closing the windows and doors is like opening and closing a safe. It is so airtight that their blower door test came back with 0.35 air changes per hour (ACH) at 50 Pascals pressure. For context, building code in Minnesota was recently lowered from 5 ACH to 3 ACH (at 50 Pascals); LEED Homes v4 will give you two points for a blower door test that comes back at 2.0 ACH or less. Now that is a tight building envelope!

Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Article By

Melissa Rappaport Schifman

Melissa became the Twin Cities’ fifth LEED for Homes Accredited Professional (LEED AP) and completed the work necessary to get her own home LEED Gold Certified, the basis for her book, Building a Sustainable Home: Practical Green Design Choices for Your Health, Wealth, and Soul, (Skyhorse Publishing, August, 2018). With her corporate experience in finance, marketing, and business development, and an MBA and Master’s in Public Policy from the University of Chicago, Melissa has been providing sustainability advisory services to businesses, governmental agencies and non-profits, focusing on strategic and operational change that provide bottom-line financial returns. She has led the LEED certification of two million square feet of commercial buildings, written GRI-compliant Corporate Sustainability Reports, is a LEED Pro Reviewer and LEED mentor with the U.S. Green Building Council. She is the founder of Green Intention LLC where she writes about sustainable home living.

Melissa Rappaport Schifman