Green Building Bible, Fourth Edition |
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These two books are the perfect starting place to help you get to grips with one of the most vitally important aspects of our society - our homes and living environment. PLEASE NOTE: A download link for Volume 1 will be sent to you by email and Volume 2 will be sent to you by post as a book. |
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Posted By: jamesingramAnyone know of PH build on Lewis etc. for him to visit or info share ?Not on Lewis but that Grand Designs house for/by two women on Skye is not far from the Uig ferry terminal, I think. Not certified PH (IIRC) but considerably better than building regs.
Posted By: Donkey
There's more than one way to skin a cat. Denby Dale house was built to Passivhaus spec using cavity wall construction. It's one of the ways I am considering for a house in the Orkney Islands.
Posted By: jamesingramHe's been up there 15 years+ . Been talking about building for a while. Personally I'd go with utility blockwork build , as you say like the locals do. ICFs water tight and up quick. Which will leave him to diy the fit out. Fair point re noise. Whats a ashp with thermal store going to cost? Gshp would be good. Just seems all these heat source options would reduce potential for fabric first approach on a limited budget. Hadn't considered small wind turbine. 6kwp all in cost anyone? He's got a small stream on plot. No idea of flow rate . Mirco hydro would be fantasic solution.
Posted By: willie.macleodYou might want to phone the local building control in Orkney and double check if they are OK with signing off a full fill cavity construction, they may want a cavity in which case the whole thing gets very expensive.I got the impression that they were fairly open-minded about building on Orkney. There's at least one properly approved strawbale (infill) house there.
Posted By: Ed DaviesI'm not entirely convinced about blocks inside the insulation where they do, at least, provide thermal mass but outside I really can't see the point at all.
Posted By: jamesingramHes talking larch cladding. Seems abit exposed for wood .Any thoughts
Posted By: willie.macleodYour block on the flat with external EPS would probably be quite cheap, the thin coat render it will remain to be seen just how well it fares, the new secondary school has large amounts of thin render which is still white (it's onto insulation). Next to it however the render on the sports centre is a disaster with large amounts of growth and discolouring although I can't say for sure exactly what they used as its a few years older.
they do some dash/spar type finishes for thincoat , I think these would fair better in exposed locations rather than single colour light finishes.
Posted By: Chris P BaconWas just looking at an episode of Grand Designs from last year about a house in Wales that used UK grown Japanese Larch that seemed to be very tough and needed no treatment to stand up to the elements. Would be worth taking a look at if they are going down that road.
Posted By: TimberOh my, was someone puffing it up in order to sell all that UK grown Japanese Larch "Super-timber"?Posted By: Chris P BaconWas just looking at an episode of Grand Designs from last year about a house in Wales that used UK grown Japanese Larch that seemed to be very tough and needed no treatment to stand up to the elements. Would be worth taking a look at if they are going down that road.
Larch isn't actually that durable (slightly to moderately durable) and that whole episode was a bit of a joke really.
Posted By: Timber
Larch isn't actually that durable (slightly to moderately durable) and that whole episode was a bit of a joke really.
Posted By: willie.macleodPosted By: jamesingram
they do some dash/spar type finishes for thincoat , I think these would fair better in exposed locations rather than single colour light finishes.
Just thinking, there have been quite a lot of poured concrete houses externally insulated (grant funded) over the last 12 months on Lewis and all I have seem have got a dash finish. It will be interesting to see how they stand up to algae growth over time compared to the smooth renders.
Posted By: camillitechafter a few years it looks carp.
Cheers, Paul