Peter Bradnam's home consists of a terrace block of four houses built in 1916 and two extensions built since 2000.
Eco improvements to the house include:
Peter Bradnam's home consists of a terrace block of four houses built in 1916 and two extensions built since 2000.
Eco improvements to the house include:
A detached Edwardian home (with a 1970' extension) in a conservation area. The owners have installed a number of both low and high tech measures, including both cheap and more expensive measures:
Mid-refurb!
An extraordinary self-build project to significantly extend and energy efficiently refurbish a mid Victorian semi-detached villa. The owner is carrying out most of the work himself including some fairly serious structural challenges and braving all weather.
Peter Bradnam's home consists of a terrace block of four houses built in 1916 and two extensions built since 2000.
Eco improvements to the house include:
Solar thermal (which heat water) Solar photovoltaic panels (which generate electricity) Internal solid wall insulation Loft insulation (325mm, plus 150mm of celotex to the rafters). Both extensions were built to higher standards than building regulations. Immersun (www.immersun.co.uk)Travel information:
Bus Stop ‘OVERSEAL’ on A444 400m away Parking on road nearbyOpening times: 17th and 18th May. 10am-4pm on both days.
Green Street is a low-energy housing development by specialist regeneration developers, Blueprint, comprising 38 individually designed, three and four bed town houses in the Meadows area of Nottingham.
You will be able to tour the showhome.
This traditional stone built house has been extensively extended and sustainably improved, aiming to be as near as possible zero carbon.
It was built in approximately 1760 with three extensions added in 1950s, 1970s and 2008.