Daylight and natural ventilation key to newly launched VELUX Carbonlight Homes

10 August 2011

The design strategy of the completed VELUX CarbonLight Homes was released today as the homes were unveiled at an opening ceremony in Rothwell, Kettering, attended by Heather Wheeler MP, The Mayor of Kettering, local Councillors and the project partners.

Paramount to the design of the two zero carbon homes, which form part of the VELUX Model Home 2020 project, is that they conform to the principles of Active House, addressing the dual challenges of energy design and liveability.

They will actively promote the health and well-being of occupants, generate a sense of community and advocate a respect for the environment, as well as achieving a minimum 70% on-site reduction in carbon emissions with the remaining 30% offset by energy efficiency improvements to existing properties elsewhere in the borough.

Project partner, HTA Architects, has made innovative use of building technology, natural daylight and ventilation to minimise energy consumption and produce a healthy indoor climate that will make the CarbonLight Homes an attractive place to live. The scheme emerged as the winner of the Innovation Award for Building Technology at the prestigious British Homes Awards 2010.

Each property’s demand for fossil fuel energy for heating, hot water and electricity has been reduced to a minimum. The dynamic building envelopes will regulate heat transmission throughout the day and the night. They will reduce the energy needed for cooling in the summer by employing natural ventilation and will utilise passive solar heat gains in the winter.

The homes promote energy self-sufficiency, using solar heating in combination with air-to-water heat pumps for hot water and space heating. Similarly, natural ventilation is used to cool the buildings with the triple height atriums around the stairs allowing for stack and cross ventilation. In hotter months, the homes can be cooled using purge ventilation while internal and external screening help to control solar gain and create a comfortable indoor climate. In winter, natural ventilation works alongside a Mechanical Ventilation system with Heat Recovery which recycles heat from the kitchen and bathrooms into the living areas.

Windows play an important part in capturing solar energy and regulating the temperature of the CarbonLight Homes as well as allowing high levels of daylight into the buildings. The homes have been designed with a minimum average daylight factor of 5% throughout, which is three times greater than the Code for Sustainable Homes requires for living spaces, reducing the need for artificial light and promoting occupant health.

The home control systems will also help occupants reduce their energy consumption and ensure a healthy indoor climate. Windows can be opened at a pre-arranged time while a climate control system opens and closes windows and blinds automatically when the weather changes.

Keith Riddle, Managing Director at VELUX Company Ltd, comments:

“We are extremely proud of the completed homes and the progress in zero carbon housing that they represent. While the industry is making headway in designing and building homes that meet our energy targets, the impact on the health and well-being of the occupants is all too often overlooked. By adopting an innovative approach to building technology, daylight and natural ventilation, our CarbonLight Homes are intended to act as a benchmark for future sustainable design in the broadest sense.”

Ben Derbyshire, Managing Director of HTA Architects, adds:

 “The CarbonLight Homes’ high average daylight factor, intelligent use of natural ventilation and dynamic building envelopes make them a truly unique residential development, which provides an indoor environment that will actively promote occupant health. We believe that this model has the potential to become a mainstay for the volume house building market.”

Caroline Wardle, Project Director at NNDC said:

“NNDC has been involved in this project from the very start when we identified the development site in Rothwell, so it is very exciting to see VELUX’s model homes completed and due to be on sale to the public very shortly. Eco-friendly construction is often talked about but not always delivered, so VELUX deserves great credit for its vision of CarbonLight Homes, which are very much in line with the wider aspirations for sustainable new housing in North Northamptonshire. There are only six houses of this type being developed in the whole of Europe and we are delighted that Rothwell was the location chosen to show off this new prototype.”

The CarbonLight Homes will now be open to the industry for six months, before becoming the subject of post occupancy evaluation for one year. The results will be fed back to the industry to help influence future low carbon housing design.

For more information please visit www.velux.co.uk/modelhome2020

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NOTES TO EDITORS:

For further information, high resolution images or comment please contact: 

Louise Marshall

The Wriglesworth Consultancy

020 7427 1400

l.marshall@wriglesworth.com

Laura Scarrott

The Wriglesworth Consultancy

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About VELUX Model Home 2020

Model Home 2020 is an experiment launched by the VELUX Group as part of its strategy to take an active part in developing sustainable buildings for the future. It is its vision of how future buildings can be both climate-neutral and comfortable and attractive places to live, through use of daylight and fresh air. The project is in full accordance with the next generation of design principles, referred to as ‘Active House’ (www.activehouse.org). The objective is to achieve a balance between energy efficiency and optimal indoor climate with a building that dynamically adjusts to its surroundings and yet is climate-neutral. 

Model Home 2020 comprises six demonstration projects. The two experiments in Denmark were built in a partnership between the VELUX Group and VELFAC. Each of the Model Home projects was implemented in close cooperation with local and regional partners, suppliers, architects, engineers and researchers.

Each building must reflect and respond to the different climatic, cultural and architectural conditions of the countries in which they are built. The houses will be open to the public for 6-12 months after completion and then sold. Each house will be monitored during occupancy to learn how the experiments turn out in real-life conditions. The experiments in Denmark – Home for Life in Aarhus and Green Lighthouse in Copenhagen – have been in use for a year, those in Germany and Austria opened in the autumn of 2010, and those in the UK and France are opening this year.

About the VELUX CarbonLight Homes

The CarbonLight Homes have been designed and built to the new Government definition of zero carbon. They are intended to be real homes for real people, which use nature in an intelligent way to maximise daylight and encourage a sustainable lifestyle. The design is open plan and incorporates high levels of daylight and natural ventilation in order to minimise energy consumption among residents and generate a sense of community. The homes show that common-sense design can be used to create inspirational sustainable houses that can be easily replicated by the UK’s volume house builders.

The CarbonLight Homes were developed in a strategic partnership between the VELUX Group, HTA Architects, Kettering Borough Council, Willmott Dixon and the North Northants Development Company, WindowMaster, VELFAC, Drexel and Weiss and Sonnenkraft supplied the products for the house.

The CarbonLight Homes are the fifth of six buildings in Europe to be constructed by the VELUX Group as part of the Model Home 2020 experiment.

www.velux.co.uk/modelhome2020

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