NATIONAL MMC ADVISORY SERVICE NOW AVAILABLE

FROM ARCHITECTS STUDIO ANYO

 

Property developers, contractors and building product manufacturers can now benefit from a new advisory service that provides sector-leading expertise around modern methods of construction (MMC) and offsite solutions.

AnyOffsite from architects and interior designers Studio Anyo, can help clients to speed up their development processes and comes as MMC practices are being adopted and integrated with Design for Manufacturing and Assembly (DfMA) to improve productivity and performance.

Able to support all types of MMC, AnyOffsite utilises digital technology as core to improving construction productivity in the offsite manufacture of structures, components, assemblies and products. A full range of advisory services enable clients to step-up development processes and include market reports to identify the most appropriate MMC options, analysis of the business implications, and the predicted productivity benefits.

Other services cover product development, and design, estimating, and cash flow analysis. Assistance with MMC specific bid management, scheduling, logistics, cash flow and supply chain management is also included alongside architectural, structural, sustainability and MEP reviews.

Strategies to assess the appropriateness and impact of MMC on a client’s operation and procurement schedule are included as part of a comprehensive package of measures that conclude with risk management assessments to identify the specific implications associated with pursuing different forms of construction.

 

Led by a team of specialists, AnyOffsite works with developers and contractors investing in MMC to reduce onsite construction and new build times, while adding design flexibility and significantly cutting property carbon footprints.

 

James Walsh, CEO of Studio Anyo, said as DfMA consultants, AnyOffsite’s knowledge of the supply chain is unparalleled, helping to ensure clients can secure best value for their projects and maximise return on investment in highly competitive markets.

He added: “MMC enable projects and development sites to be brought forward quickly and more efficiently. This allows the finished units to be marketed and sold faster. However, the sector can be difficult to navigate for property developers, contractors and building product manufacturers. So, we can help guide them in the principles of digital construction and management.

“Our services, coupled with our wealth of knowledge and industry experience, deliver technical insight, cost savings, project management efficiencies and, ultimately, strategic solutions to ensure clients are able to successfully deliver their offsite and onsite MMC projects on time.”

CLICK HERE TO FIND OUT MORE

 

AnyOffsite is a member of the Offsite Alliance – a not-for-profit organisation for makers and manufacturers of homes, using offsite/modern methods of construction – and the Association for Project Management (APM), which is the professional organisation for project and programme management. The advisers already work with a number of UK MMC manufacturers, local authorities, housing associations, consultants, private developers and NHS Trusts.

SACRÉ BLEU: French heat pump costs blow hole in ‘nonsense’ UK government policy

 

Evidence of heat pump costs for French consumers blows a hole in UK government policy a leading energy trade body has claimed. Chief Executive of Energy and Utilities Alliance (EUA), Mike Foster, believes this new evidence renders UK heat decarbonisation plans “useless” and calls for a Government re-set.

 

Current government policy believes heat pump costs will fall by 25-50 per cent by 2025 and reach parity with a gas boiler by 2030. The average heat pump costs around £10,000 to install compared to a combi-boiler replacement of £1500.

 

The Heat and Building Strategy, published in October 2021 suggests that increasing volumes of UK heat pump installations will bring costs down. Some of the wilder claims suggest heat pumps could be reduced to £1000 a unit but the evidence uncovered by EUA suggests this argument is fatally flawed.

 

Evidence uncovered by the EUA, indicates heat pump installations in France average £11,000, similar to the UK figure, but last year 537,000 heat pumps were sold in France, compared to 50,000 units in the UK. This suggests that higher volumes do not reduce costs and presents a challenge to current UK policy.

 

Commenting on the findings, Mike Foster said:

 

“The French have blown a hole in UK government policy. Their experience shows that higher volumes of heat pump sales does not massively reduce their cost. The forecasted reductions, claimed by BEIS, are simply numbers plucked from thin air. Just across the channel we have real word experience, 537,000 heat pumps fitted last year, at a similar cost to that experienced in the UK, with our 50,000 sales.”

 

“Heat pumps are a globally traded product, why would they be cheaper in the UK than France? It’s complete nonsense to suggest they would. Once you debunk this myth, the whole UK heat and buildings strategy falls apart. It now needs an urgent re-set.”

 

“Boris Johnson set a target of 600,000 heat pumps by 2028; cost reductions of 25-50 percent by 2025; parity with a gas boiler by 2030. In doing so, he has thrown public money at subsidies, he has scrapped VAT on heat pumps, he threatens to fine boiler manufacturers if they fail to meet his targets. But his own advisory body have warned that heat pump running costs are higher than a gas boiler and now these mythical costs reductions are shown to be just that, a myth.”

 

“It’s time for the new PM, whoever that is, to press the re-set button. It’s time to admit the previous policy was just hot air. And it’s time to urgently get our gas networks converted to hydrogen, keeping UK homes affordably warm without damaging the climate.”

French pricing references:

www.effy.fr/travaux-energetique/chauffage/pompe-a-chaleur/prix-pac-air-eau

www.izi-by-edf-renov.fr/produit/pompe-a-chaleur-compress-6000-aw-bosch

www.prix-pose.com/pompe-a-chaleur-air-eau/

A survey report on fraud in the construction industry reveals the most common experiences and negative impacts on businesses in the UK.

Data collected from the Fraud in the Construction Industry – Survey Report shows that a quarter of UK construction companies have experienced fraudulent activity over the last year. The common experience of fraud takes the form of changing the quality of materials, which has affected three in five companies surveyed.

A third of firms have fallen victim to invoice fraud, and one in every five companies have been affected by falsified expense reimbursements, false billing, contractors lying about qualifications, purchase fraud or stealing tools for other projects.

Although a quarter of these companies have experienced fraud in the last year, two in five didn’t report it to the police.

 

“The substitution, removal, or simple exaggeration of materials used on a project is becoming a frequent type of construction fraud. Contractors, subcontractors and tradesmen may utilise a particular grade or brand of material, or a specific piece of equipment, only to replace it with a less expensive one and keep the difference.”

–Declan Rate

CEO and Partner, Forensic Procurement Partnership Ltd

 

Bid Rigging

 

A fifth of the 39 companies surveyed had also encountered bid rigging, bribery or another form of corruption.

Bid rigging can also take the form of cover bidding, where firms agree to submit bids that were deliberately priced to lose the tender, resulting in customers paying higher prices or receiving lower quality services. This was the case in June 2022, when the Competition and Markets Authority discovered that ten construction companies have been involved in “illegal cartel agreements” when submitting bids.

They provisionally concluded that the firms colluded on prices through illegal cartel agreements when submitting bids in competitive tenders for contracts worth over £150 million, involving demolition work at the Met Police Training College, Selfridges and Oxford University, amongst others.

 

Accounting Diversion

 

Declan Rate, CEO and Partner at Forensic Procurement Partnership Ltd, defined some of the other most common forms of fraud in the construction industry:

“The construction industry has always been vulnerable to the threat of fraud and cybercrime, particularly account diversion. This is where a company receives a notification of a change of bank account email purporting to be from a legitimate construction company, when in fact, it is from someone attempting to defraud them.

“Due to the current economic crisis, fraudsters are taking more desperate measures. The substitution, removal, or simple exaggeration of materials used on a project is becoming a frequent type of construction fraud. Contractors, subcontractors and tradesmen may utilise a particular grade or brand of material, or a specific piece of equipment, only to replace it with a less expensive one and keep the difference.

“We recommend “taking 5” prior to answering any emails or entering into any transaction to ensure it’s a genuine transaction. Lack of vetting and screening could potentially cause long-term financial and reputational harm. We’d also suggest doing your due diligence when hiring anyone on a project. Check work history, and confirm qualifications and certifications. Ask yourself: Can you perform more background checks? Do they have recent references you can request?”

 

Recognising the Signs of Fraud in the Construction Industry

 

  1. Scrutinise any last-minute changes to invoices or materials
  2. Examine the details of expensive purchases
  3. Supervise workers to make sure they have the skills and health & safety knowledge required
  4. Watch out for unusual working practices, such as someone taking on duties they wouldn’t normally perform
  5. Ask your accountant to inspect your accounts
  6. Beware of resistance to anti-fraud measures

Source: ThisWeekinFM

 

click here for the survey

The Horizon Cruise Terminal was built by Brymor Construction

A RISE in administration cases among builders such as Brymor Construction could bring the risk of “contagion” to the wider economy, an expert has warned.

All 107 jobs were saved when administrators sold the business and assets of Brymor, which built Southampton’s Horizon Cruise Terminal and had the contract for the Saints’ new gym at Marchwood.

But the sale to a new venture set up by Winchester-based Portchester Equity left £16million owed by the Hampshire-based Brymor companies to unsecured creditors, who are unlikely to see any of their money.

Days later, the civil engineer Woodmace Ltd and sister company and Woodmace Plant Ltd also went into administration and were sold in a pre-pack deal to the business’s founder and former owner.

The deal saved more than 100 jobs at the business, which also worked on the Horizon terminal and on Southampton’s King George V dock.

Garry Lee, chair of R3’s Southern and Thames Valley region, said: “There have been a number of high-profile administrations in the construction industry over recent months.

“Insolvency practitioners are anticipating an uplift in insolvency related activity as inflation hits record levels and is expected to rise further.

“Cost pressures and shortages in materials are being keenly felt along with increasing fuel prices while the legacy of Covid continues to impact some businesses.

“Clearly, the administration of a main contractor will have repercussions in the supply chain and carry the risk of contagion to the wider economy.”

He advised suppliers and subcontractors to “prioritise contract management” to guard against payment delays and service level disputes, as well as ensuring any additional work is agreed and confirmed in writing.

“If financial problems do begin to manifest themselves, the best advice is to take charge of the situation at the earliest available opportunity,” said Mr Lee, an associate director at professional services firm Evelyn Partners in Southampton.

“The sooner advice is taken from a qualified and regulated insolvency professional, the greater options there are for a more positive outcome, whether that involves restructuring or some form of administration, voluntary arrangement or liquidation.”

Source: Daily Echo

Here at Briton, we’re working to find out the most common fire safety issues for people operating in your education buildings, and we’re hoping your answers will help!

We’ll use what you tell us to help inform people that work in and maintain these buildings as to how they can be better prepared for fire safety risks.

And did we mention the iPad prize!

Qualifying entrants* must have a good level of experience in the education sector and are required to answer a short questionnaire (we estimate only 5 minutes!) When you complete, you’ll be automatically entered into our prize draw, which will take place on 15/08/2022.

CLICK HERE TO COMPLETE THE SURVEY

 

 

Competition T+C’s

*Qualifying Entrants

To be entered into the prize draw you need to complete the entire survey as well as your basic contact details at the start of the survey – name and email address. Only one entry per email address is allowed. We will not use your contact details in the results of the survey, all data will be anonymised. The deadline for entries is 07/08/2022.

Prize Details

The winner will be chosen at random at Allegion (UK) Head Office by a person unrelated to this draw on 15/08/2022. The winner will be contacted on this date to arrange delivery of the prize.

This competition is being run across three publications, and the entrants will be pooled together.

The prize is an Apple iPad 10.2″ 64GB WiFi – Space Grey (2021). The prize is non-transferable and there is no cash alternative. Allegion reserves the right to substitute a prize of equal or greater value at any time.

Chemical admixtures are an essential input for products like concrete and cement used in the construction industry. These specialty chemicals are commonly used to improve the strength of concrete or to control its setting time, to allow wet concrete to be transported over longer distances or held on-site for longer periods.

Chemical admixtures, which have become increasingly important as construction methods have developed, also play a key role in reducing the cost and environmental impact of concrete production.

Sika AG is a Swiss-based multinational specialty chemical company active across the construction sector and motor vehicle industry. MBCC is also a leading global supplier of construction chemicals and solutions. Sika announced its intention to acquire MBCC, in a deal valued at around £4.5 billion, in November 2021.

Sika and MBCC are the two largest suppliers of chemical admixtures in the UK and compete closely, particularly for customers with large volume requirements . Both companies are also two of the few competitors able to support customer requirements for product development and innovation.

The CMA (Competition & Markets Authority) found that the combined business would account for over half of admixtures supplied in the UK after the merger and face limited competition, giving customers less choice and potentially leaving them facing higher costs and reduced innovation .

Colin Raftery , Senior Director of Mergers at the CMA, said:

Chemical admixtures are vital to the UK construction industry, used in projects that range from laying pavements to the very largest infrastructure projects.

The loss of competition that this deal could bring about could lead to higher prices and poorer quality products for customers, increasing the costs of these projects.

Sika AG and MBCC Group now have 5 working days to submit proposals to address the CMA’s concerns. If suitable proposals are not submitted, the deal will be referred for an in-depth Phase 2 investigation.

For more information, visit the Sika AG / MBCC Group merger inquiry page.

BCS LAUNCHES LATEST INTERNATIONAL SURVEY REPORT

 

According to the findings of the latest BCS Summer Report 2022*, there is a firm commitment amongst respondents to move towards a renewable-sourced future. However, there are also strong concerns that regulation could be placed on the industry to push initiatives for the greater use of renewable sources of power at a more rapid rate, with around 90% of the 3,000 of those surveyed believing that this could be introduced to ensure greater compliance.

James Hart, CEO at BCS, comments: “With ambitious targets to be achieved by 2025 and 2030 under the green deal, it begs the question that if our sector doesn’t get ahead of these targets, will the self-regulatory initiative become legislative and regulated? We believe our sector is at a crossroads with one route being proactive, investing in new technologies, self-generation and looking at innovative storage solutions to reach climate neutral targets. The other route is having legislation and regulation imposed on us and having to react to the imposition of energy, water and emission targets that we have no influence over.”

 

However, confidence in the sector continues with a 5% increase in respondents seeing a rising demand against a falling supply (up to 90%) which was further reinforced by a near 100% response that demand will either rise or remain the same over the next 12 months. This is despite the concerns voiced by our respondents around energy supply, skills shortages and sharply increasing costs across the board.

Disruptions to global supply chains continue to plague the data centre industry and 87% of our respondents stated that they had experienced such an eventuality in the past year, a marginal decline on the 91% recorded in our preceding survey. There are also some indications of an easing in the challenge of sourcing of construction raw materials. In 2021 just over half of respondents experienced sourcing difficulties for concrete/cement, steel, cladding materials, and dry lining materials – this has fallen to around 32% in 2022 for the concrete /cement and two-fifths for the other materials.

“The long-term effects of the global pandemic, coupled with new geopolitical issues mean that the world now faces some robust challenges. Whilst an economic slowdown across Europe may have its own consequences for growth in our industry, perhaps the most immediate and stark issue is the inflationary pressures on energy pricing that has already hit consumers and business. With the backdrop of economic indicators that suggest that stagnation and recession are at the foremost in the thoughts of the markets, the optimism shown by our respondents on the current state and future growth prospects of our sector even more remarkable.

“At BCS we are continuing to help clients navigate these global challenges and undertake the transformation that is necessary to prosper in the Green Deal environment. Our current services include informing clients of Green Deal levies, the financial modelling of impacts and supply-chain transformation that will form the map to reach our green destination,” concludes James.

 

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE REPORT

Last week UK temperatures climbed above 40C for the first time.

Hundreds of fires broke out amid the record temperatures and major fire incidents were declared in London, Norfolk, Suffolk, Lincolnshire, Leicestershire and South Yorkshire amid the tinder-dry conditions.

London Fire Brigade (LFB) had its busiest day since the Second World War as record temperatures led to hundreds of fires across the capital, with the service taking 2,670 calls.

Travellers faced chaos at rail stations on Wednesday morning after the heat caused damage to overhead wires, tracks and signalling systems.

Those who were able to stay at home weren’t safe from the punishing heat, as many reported struggling through the sweltering days after sleepless nights as they were unable to cool their homes to a bearable temperature.

British homes are designed to keep us warm

Dr Paul O’Hare, senior lecturer in urban geography and development at Manchester Metropolitan University, said heatwaves in this country are “a major blind spot” as the buildings we live and work in were probably built 30, 40 or 50 years ago for a very different climate.

He said one of the big challenges is how to retrofit those buildings while there are still buildings going up that will not be fit for the future climate.

Dr O’Hare said buildings in the Mediterranean are built in such a way that “solar gain” is minimised, meaning that not as much sunlight will be able to stream in throughout the course of the day, whereas buildings in the UK are often orientated to maximise solar gain.

This can be fine for the winter, but not so great for a changing climate.

Dr O’Hare said we need to get better at designing buildings in such a way that they do not heat up so much in the summer.

Homes are built as cheaply as possible

Marialena Nikolopoulou, professor of sustainable architecture at the University of Kent, told Time that developers often crowd many apartments into a single building in an attempt to maximise profit.

Doing this reduces the likelihood of cross ventilation from windows across the building.

Inappropriate building materials used to improve appearance or provide cheap insulation in large apartment blocks can also lead to what Nikolopoulou calls a “greenhouse effect” in summer, as the heat has nowhere to go.

“Frequently nowadays, developers buy a flat and refurbish it to sell for profit.

“So they try to do it the cheapest possible way.”

 

The way flats are designed

Twenty per cent of households in the UK live in flats, according to the 2018 English Housing Study.

A study by Loughborough University found that flats are three times more likely to overheat than any other housing type.

Lead Professor Kevin Lomas from Loughborough’s School of Architecture, Building and Civil Engineering said this suggests that it is the design of the flats that is the primary cause of systematic differences in the prevalence of overheating

In the study, summertime overheating in 750 English homes was assessed through both monitoring and questionnaires.

It found that 10% of detached and semi-detached houses had a prevalence of overheating, significantly lower than the 30% of flats that had a prevalence of overheating.

The prevalence of summertime overheating in the living rooms of flats was roughly double that in all other types of housing.

“Heatwaves will increase in frequency, intensity, and duration, and so will the health risks associated with them,” Professor Lomas said.

“With the majority of fatal heat exposures in developed nations occurring indoors, the findings of our study show just how many homes in England are at risk of overheating.”

Idiosyncratic rules

In many parts of the UK, homes that face each other at the back are required to be built 21 metres apart. This large gap means that many homes in new neighbourhoods are directly exposed to the sun rather than being clustering together around shady areas, as is common in hotter climates.

According to architect Annalie Riches, The 21-metre rule is a hangover from 1902 that was originally put in place to protect the modesty of Edwardian women.

As a result, British neighbourhoods have been designed with this rule in mind, than to the risk of overheating.

Many streets of houses are also designed so homes face each other, with no consideration for the movement of the sun, as is common in other countries.

Marianna Janowicz, an architect and founder of the feminist architecture collective Edit, told the Guardian: “Many British terrace houses were designed to follow a strict social order, formal rooms were at the front while women and servants were kept from sight at the back.

“Propriety and social mores took precedence over comfort and efficiency.”

Falling housing standards

Phineas Harper, chief executive of charity Open City British, said in a Guardian article that British homes are, on average, the smallest in Europe, with tiny rooms, low ceilings and very little floor space.

The Parker Morris standard set a minimum size for all public housing 1960s which was abolished in 1980 by Margaret Thatcher’s government.

This led to a decrease in housing sizes, a 2005 study revealed that typical newly built British houses were barely half the size of new Greek or Danish homes.

In 2006, building regulations put a requirement in place to control solar gains.

The regulations around overheating were updated in June 2022 and now include further measures to demonstrate that a home will have sufficient ventilation to allow for the removal of excess heat, and that such measures are practical for the homeowner.

However, the new regulations only apply to new builds and do not cover existing housing stock, Richard Smith, Head of Standards, Innovation and Research, at the National House Building Council, says.

“This is clearly a gap since the 2020-21 English Housing Survey found that the rooms most likely to get uncomfortably hot are spaces added by the homeowner to create additional living space, such as loft conversions and conservatories,” Smith said.

 

Source: Upday News

 

 

 

Article by Clive Feeney, Interim Group Director at LHC Group

 

Modern Methods of Construction (MMC) is increasingly recognised as a key solution to solving the UK’s housing crisis. In recent years it has carved a place in government policy, with Homes England placing it at the forefront of future housing development.

Dwellings built using these methods also have great powers to expedite the levelling up agenda, thanks to speedy construction, use of low carbon building materials and methods, and the energy efficient, cheaper-to-heat homes produced.

The Homes England Affordable Homes programme mandates that 25% of new homes will be constructed using MMC, while the MMC taskforce, set up in early 2021, was allocated £10m funding to accelerate the adoption of offsite methods. This recognition of the value of MMC in homebuilding projects, coupled with investment to accelerate the adoption of offsite methods, is extremely welcome.

 

Fulfilling demand

 Quality housing should be attainable for all UK citizens. But with more than one million people on social housing waiting lists, it is more important than ever to speed up the delivery of new homes to meet this demand.

A major benefit of using MMC is that not only is it possible to create better quality homes for people, but to build them more quickly than would be possible using traditional construction methods.

As is well-known, MMC-built homes are assembled in factory environments, allowing for more rigorous quality control. They are more energy efficient than traditional brick builds, with better insulation and designs created with sustainability and efficiency integral to them. Not only is this good for the environment and vital to helping us all reduce carbon emissions, but it is also significant in managing household utility spending – a crucial element in levelling up and in lessening the blow of rocketing energy bills.

One of the barriers to MMC being used in greater numbers has so far been the inability to scale up developments. But there may now be the catalyst, thanks to increasing routes to procure MMC through construction frameworks, together with July’s announcement from 2021-formed trade body, Make Modular, that it could reach 15,000 homes a year by 2024. This is in part due to a £500m investment in factory facilities since 2016 from its members, which include Ilke Homes, TopHat, Laing O’Rourke and Legal & General Modular Homes.

 

Reluctance to adopt

One of the key stumbling blocks is a hesitancy on the part of the social housing sector to adopt MMC until it becomes a tried and tested approach. Many registered providers would rather let the big commercial players make the mistakes from which smaller providers can learn, but can’t afford to make. This is an understandable but unfortunate impediment to progress which will no doubt be overcome in time as evidence of its benefits becomes clearer and it is recognised as a safe, progressive and cost-effective approach to housebuilding.

There is also an educational component to encouraging the adoption of MMC as standard. Requiring a significant shift in the way our homes are designed, procured and delivered, MMC is arguably the single biggest change to housing construction in many decades. The case is clear, but there’s much work to do to improve confidence in the sector and begin to see a wholehearted acceptance of MMC as the norm.

  

A brighter future

LHC has already supported the creation of more than 5,300 MMC-built social homes and with extra support provided by government, it is likely we will see more widespread uptake for the delivery of affordable homes built using MMC in the short term.

What will certainly help to drive the use of MMC is an aggregation of projects from housing providers across the country to allow greater standardisation in the supply chain. This means delivery can be quicker and cheaper, while facilitating the production of buildings of a higher quality.

At LHC we have already started on this journey and are connecting social housing providers across the UK and encouraging a constructive culture of collaboration. We are focused on identifying areas in which providers can aggregate and seek to approach their projects using MMC together, while sharing the burden of risk.

This approach has the potential to help scale the MMC market more quickly, enabling us to help UK residents reap the many benefits that a comfortable, safe home brings. It is also a vital ingredient in supporting the government’s levelling up agenda and addressing the inequality that has long surrounded our housing sector.

 

www.lhc.gov.uk

As temperatures in England and Wales soar this week, many office buildings will become unusable says real estate sustainability expert Chris Bennett of consultancy Evora Global – it should act as a powerful warning for real estate investors he says.

Bennett, who is co-founder and managing director of the sustainability services company says: “The climate emergency has huge, long-term implications for the real estate market.”

There is much evidence of an increased incidence of overheating in buildings without air-conditioning, particularly in offices, blocks of flats and individual homes during heatwaves. This is especially true of a temperate climate like the UK where the retention of winter heat has always been the main focus of thermal design.

Overheating has been particularly notable in new-build homes and in office and housing existing stock. And as we have been constantly reminded this week, excess heat affects the health and wellbeing of occupants, especially if sleep is degraded.In extreme cases, the heat stress caused can lead to premature death especially amongst the elderly. In the pan-European heatwave of 2003, there were 15,000 premature deaths.

 

High-rise Blocks

No less affected are those high-rise blocks of flats whose residents are being forced to seek-out shelter in buildings with air conditioning to work and sleep in, and some even sleep out in the corridors.

“We are obsessed with building with glass. Our city centres are dominated by glazed steel skyscrapers – giant airtight greenhouses that trap the sun’s heat and don’t let it go,” says Henrik Schoenefeldt, professor of sustainable architecture at the University of Kent.

 

Air-Con the saviour?

It is only by providing air conditioning that enables people to live and work in many of these “glass palaces” – typically high-rise blocks facing south – that are becoming wholly unsustainable environmentally.

It is only by artificially cooling these office blocks and residences that we can even step foot inside them. “You can’t actually inhabit a glass tower without it being mechanically’ air conditioned – it is actually not possible,” Schoenefeldt says.

Relying on air conditioning to offset the extreme temperatures generated inside glass fronted buildings is creating what the International Energy Agency (IEA) has called a “cold crunch”. Air conditioning now accounts for around 10 per cent of the world’s electricity demand.

But with two in every three global households expected to have air conditioning by 2050, according to one new report, with China, India and Indonesia accounting for half the total number, it means the stock of air conditioners will grow to 5.6 billion by then, from 1.6 billion today. The impact will be around 10 new ACs sold every second for the next 30 years says the IEA. This will consume more new electricity by 2050 than is currently used by the US, EU and Japan combined.

Clearly this is not sustainable long-term and flies in the face of energy efficiency targets. It’s not good news, unless you’re in the air-conditioning business, so something has to be done. Bob Ward, policy director of the Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change at the London School of Economics told The Sunday Times:

“We’re baking in – literally baking in – a massive cost in terms of future retrofitting, as well as increasingly uncomfortable working and living circumstances.”

Schoenefeldt warns that we face a new kind of fuel poverty crisis:

“We have to stop building homes and offices that can’t cope with the heat and then have to rely very heavily on air-conditioning,” he says “which isn’t to do with the inability to heat a home but actually to cool it down”.

Chris Bennett of Evora Global, whose clients include Legal and General, Hines and M&G says the current heatwave is final warning for real estate:

“The climate emergency has huge, long-term implications for the real estate market. The UK’s buildings and offices aren’t designed for temperatures in the high 30Cs, let alone the 40Cs.

“A stiflingly hot office is not a pleasant or productive place to be. Extreme heat will render some workplaces unusable, or barely usable. Some will be practically deserted as working from home re-emerges. When there is such competition to get employees back into the workplace, uncomfortable offices will become devalued.

“All of this will bring into question their overall value. Workplaces that can cost effectively cope with a heatwave will be valued more highly than those which are effectively forced to shut down. Investors could be looking to invest in real estate assets that are easy and cheap to keep cool; for people, for perishable goods and for IT. Properties that have the capacity to cope with high temperatures.

“Does the office have the capacity to keep cool without costing the Earth? Can the building manager see how the building is working and how much energy this is using? And still hit their emissions targets?

Domestic homes too have their temperature problems: floor-to-ceiling bifold doors, glass roof kitchen extensions and conservatories are all increasingly popular, but for small homes with south facing gardens and little by way of building mass and airflow become oven-like in summer.

 

Meeting the highest standards

Passivhaus standard homes might well cope because with soaring temperatures as ventilation is built into the buildings, are carefully orientated according to the the direction of the sun’s path. But few new homes going up on modern UK housing estates have this advantage and meet these standards today.

The new Part O Building Regulation that deals with overheating in domestic dwellings and residential type commercial buildings such as care homes and student accommodation, limits glazing areas to no more than 26% of floor area.

The new regulations take effect from 15 June 2022, but progress is likely to be slow – any development that is subject to a building notice, has made a full plans application, or submitted an initial notice before this date will not have to comply, provided that the work is started on site before the 15 June 2023.

Guidance given to builders states that, “it would still be good practice to reduce overheating as much as possible within a development even if not bound by the Building Regulations. There may also be other deciding factors such as Planning Conditions that need to be satisfied regarding overheating.”

London mayor, Sadiq Khan, has issued guidance that major developments in London should reduce the amount of heat entering buildings in the summer by: careful orientation of a property, providing shading, fenestration (window openings design), insulation, green roofs and walls, all heat reduction techniques often suggested.

 

Relearning old lessons

As has often been the case in building architecture and design, the lessons learned in the past, the old methods, need to be brought back. Schoenefeldt says this: “look back in time and get back to architectural basics when early glass structures” – Crystal Palace being a case in point, was shaded on the outside with canvas screens, as were older greenhouses.

Wooden shutters and shades were standard fixtures in on fittings on older properties, along with recessed balconies and smaller windows. Ward has suggested that UK architects look to French and Tuscan farmhouses as examples:

“We’re going to have to fit shutters and get used to shutting them in the day.” That’s because external shutters are much more effective at reflecting the heat than are internal blinds.

Stefan Thor Smith, associate professor at the University of Reading’s school of construction management and engineering, told The Sunday Times, that these old lessons, “go beyond how we keep out the sun and extend to the very fabric of our buildings. Over the past 20 years or so we’ve been building with lightweight construction and lots of insulation. The more thermal mass you have, it alleviates some of the problems.”

Heavy building materials including stone, brick and concrete will absorb the heat by day and release it at night. Buildings like this will smooth out the heat curves inside and outside, cool in summer and acting like radiators to provide warmth in winter, once they have reached their optimum temperature.

Contrast this with the modern tower block and the relatively thin skin and glazed exterior. Many even have limited inside ventilation. Smith has suggested that insulation or cladding be installed on the outside rather than the inside of these buildings, providing it has the correct fire rating after the lessons of Grenfell, to offset the effects of poor building materials mass.

 

Source: Landlordzone