A Case Study of Nine Post-Hydrocarbon Ready Homes

Summarising In-Use Building Performance Data, Benchmarking Against UK Building Regulation Standards

Authors

  • Jeremy Harrall Dr. Jerry Harrall
  • Anton Ianakiev Nottingham Trent University image/svg+xml
  • Nicholas Miles EWI Pro Insulaton Systems Ltd

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.52825/isec.v1i.1169

Keywords:

Energy Efficient, Post-Hydrocarbon, SAP Ratings

Abstract

A typical 2bed dwelling at Howgate Close, after 16months of occupation, has a daily average energy bill of 10pence/day/dwelling [1] It is proffered that Howgate Close may be the most energy efficient group of dwellings of its type, in the UK [2].

Howgate Close is a residential neighbourhood of nine single storey dwellings, operating free of fossil fuels, they are post-hydrocarbon ready. The development is located in Nottinghamshire, UK, and was completed in June 2022.

All nine homes are a net annual generator of surplus renewable energy, with little to no heating demand. Six of the nine homes remain naturally heated, with no resort to the electric underfloor heating system. Exceptionally high levels of energy efficiency have been achieved with third-party verification, the As-Built SAP Rating of 143A [3] Such a rating places these homes in the top 0.01% of the 12million registered UK Energy Performance Certificate‘s (EPC) [4].

This paper provides a building Case Study that evidences performance standards making comparisons with the UK Building Regulation Compliance Standards [5] Howgate Close’s exceptional energy efficiency can be described as an aggregation of marginal gains [6] This paper is a prelude to more forensic analysis of Howgate’s in-use building performance, with the installation more advanced monitoring equipment in May 2024 for a period of two years.

EWI Pro, Dr Harrall and Nottingham Trent University (NTU) are to undertake further data dissemination, providing a more forensic Howgate Case Study for ISEC 2025.

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References

Octopus Energy Ltd. (2023) Energy Bill (12th October - 13th Nov. 2023) 9 Howgate Close, NG22 0FW

Harrall. J. (2023) Howgate Close Case Study. https://www.drharrall.com/blog/ last accessed 2024/02/09.

HM Government. (2022). EPC No. 0370-3412-0030-2322-6481, 1 Howgate Close. June.

Harrall. J. (2023) Howgate Close Case Study. https://www.drharrall.com/blog/ last accessed 2024/02/09.

HM Government (2023) UK Building Regulations 2010: Approved Documents. March

Brailsford. D. (2012) 21 Days To Glory. Book. ISBN 9780007506637

Harrall. J. (2023) Howgate Close Case Study. https://www.drharrall.com/blog/ last accessed 2024/02/09.

CCC (2019) UK Housing Fit For The Future: Committee on Climate Change. February

HM Government (2021) Net Zero Strategy: Build Back Greener. October

HM Government. (2022) Energy Performance Certificate (EPC) No. 0370-3412-0030-2322-6481, 1 Howgate Close. June.

Hockerton Housing Project. 2016. Eakring Eco Housing Planning Drawings: www.hockertonhousingproject.org.uk

Cerri. A. (2024) Post Hydrocarbon People Last visited 2024/02/18

Harrall. J. (2023). Reservoirs of Heat: A Defining Characteristic of High Thermal Mass Earth-Sheltered Buildings. ACUUS 15th World Conference, Singapore. November.

BRE. (2024) BRE Linear Thermal Transmittance Last visited 2024/02/01

MES. (2024) MES Building Solutions: Psi Calculations. BuildDesk 3.4.6. 31st January

MES. (2024) MES Building Solutions: Condensation Calculations. BuildDesk 3.4.6. 31st January

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Published

2024-04-09

How to Cite

Harrall, J., Ianakiev, A., & Miles, N. (2024). A Case Study of Nine Post-Hydrocarbon Ready Homes : Summarising In-Use Building Performance Data, Benchmarking Against UK Building Regulation Standards. International Sustainable Energy Conference - Proceedings, 1. https://doi.org/10.52825/isec.v1i.1169

Conference Proceedings Volume

Section

Positive Energy Buildings and Districts