Edwardian morals, Thatcher and bad design – why Britain's homes are so hot | Phineas Harper

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Compared with our European neighbours, Britain’s homebuilders disregard environmental performance, says Phineas Harper of Open City

stock in Europe. Our homes are poorly insulated and draughty, have virtually no shading and are badly oriented. How did one of the world’s wealthiest economies end up with houses that are so unprepared for extreme weather?

British domestic architecture has also been shaped by idiosyncratic rules that contribute to its poor environmental credentials. For instance, in many parts of the UK, homes that face each other at the rear are required to be built 21 metres apart. This large distance means that instead of clustering buildings together around cool courtyards or shady streets, as is common in hotter climates, many homes in new neighbourhoods are directly exposed to the sun.

As a result, entire British neighbourhoods have been designed with more attention paid to this antiquated rule than to the risk of overheating. Many streets of houses are also designed so homes face each other, with no orientation taking account of the movement of the sun or from which direction the wind normally blows, as is common in other countries.

 

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