Passive House and Low Energy Buildings: Barriers and Opportunities for Future Development within UK Practice

This paper describes research carried out to understand better the current and future emphases emerging from practice for the design and development of “Passive House” and low energy buildings. The paper initially discusses the extant position, particularly with regards to the UK and considers how r...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Adrian Pitts
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2017-02-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/9/2/272
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spelling doaj-690e8ec8a03c44faba553885afd74a632020-11-24T22:49:00ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502017-02-019227210.3390/su9020272su9020272Passive House and Low Energy Buildings: Barriers and Opportunities for Future Development within UK PracticeAdrian Pitts0Centre for Urban Design, Architecture and Sustainability, University of Huddersfield, Queensgate, Huddersfield HD1 3DH, UKThis paper describes research carried out to understand better the current and future emphases emerging from practice for the design and development of “Passive House” and low energy buildings. The paper initially discusses the extant position, particularly with regards to the UK and considers how regulation and assessment systems have changed in recent years, as well as projecting ideas forward taking account of contemporary political situations. Relevant previous research into Passive House and low energy design and construction is then reviewed. The need for greater understanding of professionals and their communication/collaboration with clients were identified as important factors impacting development. Those involved in the design and construction practice therefore have key roles in the process of enhancing energy efficiency. Five industry/practice based professional organizations were interviewed in-depth to gain insights into their experience of current low energy design, and to extrapolate the outcomes to future scenarios. The method employed used a structured interview technique with key question areas to lead the discussion. The anonymized responses discussed are grouped around key themes. Evidence suggests there has been a move towards the adoption of voluntary high level standards because of potential limitations with mandatory regulations and because of perceived additional benefits of higher quality design. This change is now more than previously, being driven by informed clients, design professionals, and the industry, with regulation taking a secondary role. New opportunities and barriers are becoming evident and these require further consideration.http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/9/2/272Passive Houselow energyconstructionpracticedesign
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Adrian Pitts
spellingShingle Adrian Pitts
Passive House and Low Energy Buildings: Barriers and Opportunities for Future Development within UK Practice
Sustainability
Passive House
low energy
construction
practice
design
author_facet Adrian Pitts
author_sort Adrian Pitts
title Passive House and Low Energy Buildings: Barriers and Opportunities for Future Development within UK Practice
title_short Passive House and Low Energy Buildings: Barriers and Opportunities for Future Development within UK Practice
title_full Passive House and Low Energy Buildings: Barriers and Opportunities for Future Development within UK Practice
title_fullStr Passive House and Low Energy Buildings: Barriers and Opportunities for Future Development within UK Practice
title_full_unstemmed Passive House and Low Energy Buildings: Barriers and Opportunities for Future Development within UK Practice
title_sort passive house and low energy buildings: barriers and opportunities for future development within uk practice
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2017-02-01
description This paper describes research carried out to understand better the current and future emphases emerging from practice for the design and development of “Passive House” and low energy buildings. The paper initially discusses the extant position, particularly with regards to the UK and considers how regulation and assessment systems have changed in recent years, as well as projecting ideas forward taking account of contemporary political situations. Relevant previous research into Passive House and low energy design and construction is then reviewed. The need for greater understanding of professionals and their communication/collaboration with clients were identified as important factors impacting development. Those involved in the design and construction practice therefore have key roles in the process of enhancing energy efficiency. Five industry/practice based professional organizations were interviewed in-depth to gain insights into their experience of current low energy design, and to extrapolate the outcomes to future scenarios. The method employed used a structured interview technique with key question areas to lead the discussion. The anonymized responses discussed are grouped around key themes. Evidence suggests there has been a move towards the adoption of voluntary high level standards because of potential limitations with mandatory regulations and because of perceived additional benefits of higher quality design. This change is now more than previously, being driven by informed clients, design professionals, and the industry, with regulation taking a secondary role. New opportunities and barriers are becoming evident and these require further consideration.
topic Passive House
low energy
construction
practice
design
url http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/9/2/272
work_keys_str_mv AT adrianpitts passivehouseandlowenergybuildingsbarriersandopportunitiesforfuturedevelopmentwithinukpractice
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