With its glass gable, Scandi-colours and copper guttering, the COP house is an unlikely cottage design for its current location.
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It's in the shadow of Glasgow's Kingston motorway bridge, resting on railway sleepers atop the site of a former petrol station.
Its neighbour is a marquee where you can see an innovative vertical farming system that came out of Scottish agriculture research.
Visitors for the climate change conference can see the design of a home that features not only conventional Scottish timber - floor, walls, roof and insulation - but a twist of hemlock wood in its interior.
The design captures sunlight and body warmth, while drawing the warmth of stale air as it's expelled to warm the fresh incoming air. Hardly any additional heating will be required.
Permanent home
Having been designed in sections which can be unscrewed, the two-bedroom cottage, with its spectacular living room/kitchen will be dismantled on Clydeside and taken to a permanent home near Aviemore, as one of 12 such houses in a social housing development.
Peter Smith, the designer with Roderick James Architects, says that the timber represents around 50 tonnes of carbon dioxide captured in its growth. That's at a ratio of roughly one tonne of timber to one tonne of CO2.
A calculation of the emissions resulting from the manufacture of the house comes to 25 tonnes.
Hence, building such a home can be seen to capture twice as much of the greenhouse gas as is emitted. The house itself is a sort of carbon sink. And once its life is over on Speyside, all the materials can be recycled.
Much of the technical challenge and cost of Scotland's home heating challenge has to do with retrofitting existing homes.