- Mobile site
- E-Newsletters
-
- News feed
- Find us on Twitter
@brightonargus
All the latest news and view from the Argus
@theargusoffers
The latest offers and competitions from the Argus
@theargusguide
The best events in Brighton, Hove and Sussex
@ArgusMagazine
Features, interviews, TV, travel and lifestyle from the Argus
- Find us on Facebook
The Argus
The Argus - news, sport and leisure for Brighton, Hove and Sussex
The Argus Offers and Competitions
Keep up to date with all the offers, events and competitions from the Argus
Plan to insulate homes whole streets at a time (From The Argus)
Get involved: Send your news, views, pictures and video by texting SUPIC to 80360 or email us.
Plan to insulate homes whole streets at a time
10:44am Thursday 22nd November 2012 in News By Neil Vowles
Southampton Street in Hanover, Brighton may be the first street with insulation on the outside
A forward-thinking architect has come up with a plan to insulate the damp and draughty Victorian homes of Brighton – a whole street at a time.
Green thinking Duncan Baker-Brown is calling on neighbours to come together to have their street insulated in one major project to reduce their carbon emissions by 80%.
And the architect with Cooksbridge-based BBM Sustainable Design says that residents could save 50% on insulation costs if a whole street is wrapped in insulation.
Following a detailed project studying Southampton Street in Brighton, Mr Baker-Brown believes that through “economies of scale” the cost of insulating the house could be reduced from £30,000 to £15,000 per house.
The system works by applying a layer of Polyurethane insulation onto the outside of the building and then adding render over the top, allowing the street to retain its original appearance.
Sustainable design
Mr Baker-Brown, whose firm is currently working on the first house made entirely of waste, says his firm has the expertise to start now.
Previous work by BBM Sustainable Design includes a £150,000 retrofit of a house in Lovers Walk, Brighton, which reduced emissions by 85%.
The project could help homes to hit Government targets to reduce carbon emissions by 80% by 2050.
To insulate a whole street an agreement would have to be reached with all the residents in the road before work could begin.
Mr Baker-Brown said: “A lot of people will pay about £1,200 on their energy bill a year but this would take it down to £250.
“With the rate that energy bills are increasing, it could be saving thousands in the near future.”
A Brighton and Hove City Council spokesman said the insulation project would be more suited to the less energy-efficient homes of the private sector rather than council homes.
He added: “We have met Duncan on this and are excited by his work as it seeks to address the big challenge of retrofitting energy efficiency measures into the existing housing stock.”
See the latest news headlines from The Argus:
- Brighton and Hove braces itself for another week of bin strikes as rubbish piles up
- Cyclists flout pavement ban just days after police crackdown on Brighton seafront
- Brighton and Hove City Council urged to let blue badge holders park for free
- Children in Brighton get new toys thanks to The Argus Appeal
- Sister’s tribute to man who ‘lived for’ climbing
Add us to your circles on Google+
Comments(10)
chilliman
says...
11:12am Thu 22 Nov 12
What's new about this product and why isn't it suitable for council houses, apart from the cost?
Uncle_Meat
says...
11:13am Thu 22 Nov 12
Telscombe Cliffy
says...
11:22am Thu 22 Nov 12
More disruptive , but insulating the walls internally would be better surely?
Chaffinch1
says...
11:39am Thu 22 Nov 12
mustaphaLeeko
says...
12:05pm Thu 22 Nov 12
Chaffinch1 wrote:It's the Argus, so it must be an advert, they seem to have more adverts than News now, that's why the website is so dreadfully dreadfully SLOW to open even on a 25mbps connection.
Is this news or is it an advert?
This website is awful, pretty much every other one opens immediately.
Maybe they are running it on a Pentium 1 lol. Cheapos, or maybe they'll come out with the usual rot, "oh one of our ads is running slowly".. NO, they all are Argus.
sbiscorrupt
says...
12:50pm Thu 22 Nov 12
£1,000 tops for loft/cavity wall insulation...!
Anything else is not cost effective!
Mr Baker-Brown sounds like just another typical spiv jumping on the 'eco bandwagon...
I wonder what the Argus's cut will be'!
GIVE UP
says...
2:35pm Thu 22 Nov 12
Surely not!
says...
3:11pm Thu 22 Nov 12
RottingdeanRant
says...
5:23pm Thu 22 Nov 12
Much as I agree with the comments about flattening this housing stock the simple truth on average these properties are valued at about £230K each. Therefore if you knocked them down and rebuilt at a cost of around £150K the new property would need to be valued at more than £380K to make the work worthwhile - unlikely!
Algeria Touchshriek says...
10:58am Thu 22 Nov 12
Stupid idea, stupid story, stupid man!