Akihabara News (Tokyo) — A joint venture of Panasonic Homes and Sojitz Corporation called PT PanaHome Deltamas Indonesia (PHDI) has initiated the sale of eighteen smart home units in West Java, Indonesia.
Each housing unit is outfitted with Panasonic’s Home Network System and PureTech air filtration and ventilation system, which is a device that filters out about 90% of any harmful particles that enter the house, according to Panasonic Homes.
The houses are also equipped with security networks and energy-saving functions, with the use of solar and wind power as well as rain water.
The construction method used by Panasonic PowerTech built the houses quickly while still meeting anti-earthquake criteria required for shop and office buildings in Indonesia.
The houses are part of PHDI’s Savasa residential project, an initiative to provide the people of Indonesia with a “smart lifestyle.” This is the beginning of one of four housing clusters in Savasa’s first phase of development, which will eventually consist of 811 houses and 33 shophouses over an area of thirteen hectares.
The smart town is strategically located in the heart of Deltamas city, a convenient distance from main business districts, and only minutes from the Karawang Station of the Jakarta-Bandung High Speed Rail.
Savasa plans to build a total of 2,500 houses by 2030 on a determined area of 37 hectares, slated to accommodate around 10,000 residents.
Panasonic Homes has built a total of approximately 480,000 homes in Japan over the past fifty years.
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