We are committed to doing our part in environmental preservation by constructing high quality, energy efficient buildings. To have a minimal environmental impact, we try to limit waste, pollution and greenhouse gas emissions. We take a holistic approach to sustainability by working with a range of systems including: permaculture gardening, rain water collection and treatment, solar power and hydrogen as energy storage.
Building high quality homes means finding the right materials, partners and workers for the job. We’ve assembled a team of experts in their field who are always seeking to challenge themselves with different ideas and technologies. Our employees are perpetually evolving from attending new trainings and classes. CNX Construction is the only company in Northern Thailand with a KNX certification, the worldwide standard for home automation.
Building high quality homes means finding the right materials, partners and workers for the job. We’ve assembled a team of experts in their field who are always seeking to challenge themselves with different ideas and technologies. Our employees are perpetually evolving from attending new trainings and classes. CNX Construction is the only company in Northern Thailand with a KNX certification, the worldwide standard for home automation.
We believe the planning and building process should be based on a trustworthy partnership, so we take the time to discuss with our clients their individual needs and visions. We are in contact with our clients during every stage of the process, from the initial sketches, to 3D models to the physical construction. We prioritize quality design and transparency to ensure our clients’ safety, comfort and happiness.
The sun shines more than 300 days a year in Chiang Mai, Thailand, and Hamburg entrepreneur Sebastian-Justus Schmidt says, “it is the perfect location for a solar energy system.” His Phi Suea House’s solar panels produce 6,000 kWh a month, enough to power 20 to 25 average North American households.
Originally published on the ECOreport The sun shines more than 300 days a year in Chiang Mai, Thailand, and Hamburg entrepreneur Sebastian-Justus Schmidt says, “it is the perfect location for a solar energy system.”
The Phi Suea House project is a sustainable set of residences fully powered by solar panels using an innovative hydrogen fuel cell system to store its power. This is combined with a water collection and re-use system, and home automation, to maximize energy saving and minimize carbon footprint.
After their initial success in developing application software, German Sebastian Justus Schmidt and Nattapong Lekchaichan decided to diversify and establish a construction and architect advisory company, CNX Construction Co, for the development of energy-saving and sustainable buildings in Chiang Mai.
All-day energy from the sun may sound like a green fantasy, but a team of builders and engineers in Thailand believe they may have built a home energy system that does just that.
Over the next few months, sensors installed by researchers at Nanyang Technical University in Singapore will record data on energy performance, to verify if the Phi Suea Homes are living up to their promise.
We’ve seen individual homes that are completely off-grid, but there are very few residential developments that have this distinction. Thailand-based development company CNX Construction is set to debut the world’s first 24-hour, solar-powered hydrogen storage multi-house complex.
Although solar panels can be used to power a home with clean energy, demand for power fluctuates during the day and excess power is often also produced. A new development in Chiang Mai, Thailand, reportedly solves these problems. It converts excess power to hydrogen and stores it for use later.
CNX Construction Co., Ltd. 33/4 Moo.4,Sanphisuea ,Mueng ChiangMai, Thailand 50300
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