Bristol breaks new ground with low carbon development
- Housing Developments
- 3 min read
Bristol City Council’s 133 homes at Ashton Rise are being built using the high efficiency Sig iHouse solution, and heated by individual Kensa ground source heat pumps connected to a shared ground loop array of boreholes.
The installation would see each home making lifetime carbon savings of 30 tonnes compared to individual gas boilers, whilst also removing all local NOx emissions, ensuring local air quality is not impacted by the choice of heating system.
With completion expected in Spring 2021, works have commenced on site by developer Willmott Dixon, with the aid of UK ground source heat pump specialists, Kensa, undertaking the heat pump system installation.
The development is the first of its kind for Bristol City Council which features 40% of homes for social rent, and will see the council building houses for sale on the private market for the first time.
The Bristol Mayor has set out the commitment of building 2,000 new homes – 800 affordable – a year by 2020. Coupled with Bristol’s 2030 net-zero commitment ahead of any other UK city, the Council have taken an innovative approach to reducing the carbon and air pollution from its housing programme early on.
Following the Greater London Authority’s findings that Kensa's communal ground source heat pump design is the lowest cost solution for end users and the most efficient and lowest carbon heating technology, Bristol City Council is leading the transition away from gas for new build developments by using Kensa’s British-manufactured Shoebox ground source heat pumps in the Ashton Rise development.
Councillor Paul Smith, Cabinet Member for Housing at Bristol City Council, said:
David Broom, Commercial Director at Kensa, said:
The ground source heat pump system at Ashton Rise has been future-proofed to enable residents to save now and in the future. Due to the stable temperature of the ground all year round, electrically-powered ground source heat pumps offer continuous energy and carbon saving improvements as supporting technology and initiatives advance; the introduction of flexible time-of-use tariffs could enable Ashton Rise residents to enjoy even greater savings, whilst the heating system has been enabled to allow passive cooling from the ground loop, which is naturally cooler than the air in summer, offering virtually free cooling when needed.
Neal Stephens, Managing Director for Willmott Dixon South West said: