Green Building Bible, Fourth Edition |
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: WillInAberdeenThe new mantra is "Fabric Fifth".I think that's a little simplistic. For example, retrofitting a heat pump in a house without improving the fabric first will result in a larger (more expensive) heat pump being needed with consequent worse performance and greater running costs. As the abstract itself says "The suitability of a heat-pump-only approach to building decarbonisation should therefore be decided building by building."
Posted By: VictorianecoAnd best website for heat pump sizing?
Posted By: VictorianecoWe would like to upgrade a lot of things and add a rear single storey extension but just wondering the best order to plan this project as we are also living in it?I've done a couple while living in them - it's not easy. Consequently I'd split the place into phases so that not everywhere is being worked on at once, rather than prioritising particular bits of kit.
Posted By: VictorianecoWould you even use rads?? Maybe go for air to air heat pump on the landing area and just rads downstairs? Or how about plinth heaters coming out of the floor?My preference would be UFCH or air-to-air heat pump. You need to get it designed rather than guessing on sizes though - ideally for the future insulation & airtightness levels, rather than current ones, though that may mean some top-up heating until you finish.
Posted By: VictorianecoHow would A2A work in a multi room property and hot water? I really don't think A2A is good for anything other than a small flat or 1 down/1 up type property
Posted By: Nick ParsonsAnd you can get HWCs with an integral exhaust-air HP.But of course first you pay to heat the air before it gets exhausted, and then you pay again to heat some water using the warm air. Not the most logical system design possibly?
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