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Advantages Of Timber Framed Housing

Advantages Of Timber Framed Housing

advantages of timber framed housesI saw a Tweet sent out today on Twitter about the critical lack of affordable housing and the associated costs of building new etc and I was reminded of when I lived in Galway- West Ireland.

Galway is quite a wild place as far as weather conditions, being placed on the west coast it gets a lot of rather …er…bracing Atlantic winds and rain. Even back then – which is over 5 years ago, the Irish were starting to see the benefits of Swedish style housing. Since then there has also been other whole villages built in an eco style, including a “cluster” which I talk about later on.

Personally having seen and been in timber framed housing I am a big fan, and it does seem that there are many advantages to this style, along with many misconceptions as to what they can look like and safety / longevity etc

Timber frames have many advantages:

  • quick to build- come in pre-fabricated format
  • cheap in comparison to regular building
  • less problems with co-ordinating various building trades
  • long lasting and robust
  • eco friendly – using less resources to build and sustain
  • can be blended well into surroundings
  • warm and easy to heat

Energy Efficient

The main emphasis is energy-efficiency. Swedish building methods and traditions play a large role in this. High levels of insulation and an airtight ‘building envelope’ in conjunction with ventilation heat-recovery systems and triple glazed low-emission-argon filled glass are important factors within these builds. ( And you don’t get much more Eco than that!)

Standard Swedish style houses used to be “LOW-ENERGY“, meaning that they use only small amounts of energy for heating. Since 2006 most houses are now built to fully “PASSIVE-STANDARDS“, which means they combine a variety of techniques and technologies to achieve ultra-low energy use. The houses ( and flats) are designed using a standard modular system which keeps costs and timescales low. Together with this  passive-solar heating is maximized through triple glazed windows, while taking into account the local wind, rain and other climatic conditions.

Sustainable

Scandinavian Homes builds the highly insulated concrete foundation complete with under-floor heating and erects the insulated shell with roof, windows & doors. Other components such as water-saving taps, direct- pressure water-heater, ventilation heat-recovery system and timber floors are also evident.

From a personal point of view, Ive lived with underfloor heating and its fantastic. I will definitely have it in my next build or renovation for myself. Its a joy to live with, and no ugly radiators taking up wall space.

With all this technology  it is possible to create a modern, spacious and ecological house while still retaining important cultural elements. Not all houses are typical wooden exteriors as some people expect. Two storey Traditional rendered houses can be made with hipped roofs (without attic conversion,) of  traditional 30° roof pitch and rain-gutters all around. ( See main picture above.)

So if this is so good why are we not building more in this country?  Sustainable design should include proximity of public transport and possibilities for car-pooling and the usual urban life demands such as amenities etc. Back in Ireland, a very successful “Eco-cluster” was given permission to build a quantity of mixed housing including houses with apartments.

Lars Petterssons from Scanhome Explains

Lars Petterssons’ idea is to allow the building of medium to high density small eco-clusters of sustainable houses adjacent to major roads. These roads have bus services leading to towns and villages and the people in such clusters can easily car-pool. Affordable by location, away from the most expensive land and by increasing the density. They could consist of, say,  a couple of houses with 4-6 apartments  and 5-10 individual houses of varying size and cost. In such clusters it is possible to integrate social housing in a natural way. Rich and poor, people in different stages of life – young and old – could live here.

These eco clusters can be built concealed from view from the road if needed but still be walking distance from a bus stop. They can be built by people forming a coop or by people just getting together to realize their dream of a reasonable sustainable and affordable life. Download their brochure: A builders first day in cloughjordan-1- pdf


Comments

I LOVE this idea, it seems so obvious and something which could be achieved in UK if the government were to be a bit more progressive and allow more of this type of thinking. Timber frames are the way forward on so many levels, but this is only my opinion, what do you think?


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  • http://www.christianvigursdesigns.com/ Cija

    Hi Roberta,

    Having a few friends now who have built timber framed homes, with the techniques and technologies you have mentioned above I totally agree with you. The owners of these houses would agree 110% too. I also find the eco village in Co Tipperary so interesting on many different levels. I have some friends who will be staying in this village for a weekend in summer to experience the life style etc. I Will let you know how they got on. Great post btw.

  • http://www.mypropertymentor.co.uk/ Roberta Ward

    Thanks for your comment Cija. I would be very interested to hear what its like to stay there- do they rent them to holiday makers or do they know someone living there. I wish we were more forward looking in UK. We seem to give lip service without action. No point shouting 'we're green' if you dont back it up with action! Glad you enjoyed the post.

    • Cija

      Morning, unfortunately this weekend is a one off! They won it in an auction to raise money for a tribal village in Africa.
      One of the families already living in the village will be hosting them for the weekend. They do have open days and courses which you have probably seen on the website. A weekend there would be good though to really get the feel of the place.

  • http://www.francosiemurat.com/ Francoise Murat

    Whenever I talk to people about this they often cite the wet weather in the UK and that wood would not last- I think that this could be disproved with solid research. I have family in Sweden and the triple glazed windows and insulation is amazing. The thing they do right is that they mix Passiv technologies with other green building materials with low embodied energy. They use what is on the market and what works. I often find in the UK people try to re-invent the wheel when there are perfectly good technologies out there already.

    • http://www.mypropertymentor.co.uk/ Roberta Ward

      Hi Francoise, the weather in UK is an excuse, snow is also wet and the Scandinavians have very Eco friendly homes.You are right about UK needing to find 'new' solutions- possibly that may be down to govt grants being available for them I suspect. What we need is a progressive govt that cares about green issues, not just 'talking about caring' as they do right now. Great comment.

    • http://twitter.com/ESIBuilding Benedikte Ranum

      You're absolutely right – there are so many (relatively simple) ways that have been used for decades (sometimes centuries) in other countries that could be adopted in the UK. In Norway, where I grew up, a common house layout is to have the bedrooms downstairs and the living areas/kitchen upstairs. People generally like sleeping in cool rooms, whilst having warmer living-rooms – the heat rises – it works! No technology required… Triple glazing, underfloor heating and good insulation are the norm rather than the exception. (Mind you, it's -18ºC in my home town at the moment, so I guess it's all a matter of necessity!)

      • Francoise Murat

        Hi Benedikte – yes absolutely makes so much sense to have living quarters upstairs in houses- heat rises as you say, simple! However in your country crime is not as prolific as in ours – (I remember visiting and my friends did not even close their front door when leaving!) – so I wonder about sleeping downstairs. But there are so many measures people can take – I guess as energy prices climb people will make more of an effort to input such technologies into their new homes as well as well as governments pushing it. Let's hope market forces bring the prices down – as currently some suppliers are hiking prices.

      • http://www.mypropertymentor.co.uk/ Roberta Ward

        One problem with this country is that we tend to be backward looking not forward looking. History etc is important to us as a people, so I guess that the most obvious way forward is to try keep similar to what we have but using the new eco/ sustainable methods.Once it becomes more mainstream, then more radical ideas could be put forward.We are slow to change and not trail blazers anymore as we were centuries ago.
        Thanks for posting Benedikte! Great debate we have going here.Be interested to see you blog here next week.

  • http://twitter.com/mattbfranklin Matthew Franklin

    Roberta

    A good post, with lots to think about.

    Regarding the cost of affordable housing, I should point out that I am linked with an Architect Practice that has designed a 3 bedroom eco home that can be built complete for £120,000. They are in discussions with Social Housing companies as their building cost less to build per square meter than some Housing Associations are building standard homes for.

    Any support of Timber Frame building is good and we should try to support the UK industry as much as possible rather that import 'eco' materials and products from Europe. For example, there are a good number of UK timber frame providers, some of which source UK timber, that can make traditional or modern buildings for small or large developments.

    In my experience the advantages of timber frame building vary depending on who you talk to and while I agree with the points in general, it is worth considering the following:
    Quick to build: Design and manufacture times are often overlooked when comparing build methods.
    Long lasting and robust: They can also be very adaptable if designed and built to allow for future extensions/changes. This is where modern timber frame and engineered timber has improved significantly in recent years.
    Eco friendly: Especially if in the UK and worth checking that wood comes from a sustainable source.

    The use of wood in buildings provides a great number of opportunities and will play a significant part in achieving our national goal for all new homes to be zero carbon from 2016.

    • http://www.mypropertymentor.co.uk/ Roberta Ward

      Wow! matt thanks for your detailed response to this blog.Its great that a timber framed house can be built at reasonable cost. How does that figure compare with a traditional brick style build? Would it work in a more mainstream approach too? Im convinced that sustainable/ Eco building is not really down to cost anymore, its more about a change in our mind set as a people. Completely agree about sourcing products and labour within the UK too.Makes perfect sense.

      • http://twitter.com/mattbfranklin Matthew Franklin

        Roberta
        Thanks for your reply. To answer your questions I have the following response from the people behind COzY Homes:
        'The version featured on the website is a timber frame, we also have a masonry version as a basic option without the code elements such as pv and solar heating for £60k with the labour on top (about £15k)- they look exactly the same.

        It is also important to note that the foundations are included but service connections are not.

        The timber frame version has a phase changing material as a heat store, this is quite expensive but believe it is necessary to compensate for the lack of thermal massing in timber frame builds.'

        Matthew Franklin

  • http://www.amadiconstruction.co.uk/ manny

    Great article.
    In 1990 timber frame buildings accounted for only 8% of new homes in the UK.By 2008 that figure had risen to 25%….the number is still rising due to the growing concern about green issues – timber is regarded as a sustainable resourse

    • http://www.mypropertymentor.co.uk/ Roberta Ward

      Thanks Manny for filling in the % details, its good to know that timber framed buildings are on the rise. If the cost became comparable maybe it would gain ground more quickly. Cost is usually the bargaining chip needed to change govt belief.

  • Lee Miles

    I am contemplating buying a 3 year old timber framed retirement bungalow however I am very dubious according to many of the sites i have visited  labour cost is 20% lower and construction time 25% + quicker than for brick/celcon buildings why is this not reflected in the price & I am also worried that hidden items such as quality of internal fixings Ie correct galvanised nails or plain wire, correct membrane installation are totally unknown and unsurveyable factors that could cause major headaches a few years down the line.
    Any thoughts as I like the sound and insulation benifits but if the structure is not long term sustanable with poor resale market its a waste of my hard earned money

    • http://www.mypropertymentor.co.uk/ Roberta Ward

      Hi Lee. Your comment applies a lot of assumptions. Why would the builders of the home you seek to buy have used non standard nails for the build? And, to be fair, that could be said of any build whether brick or timber. If it is such a new house then there must be details of who built it and the spec applied surely?

      Do some research about the builders and system used to help you make up your mind.

      Also, why would you assume the building is not ‘long term sustainable’ or with a poor resale value? Is there something about the house which gives rise to these doubts?

      I would think that the resale value will be the same as most new builds, and could even surpass it due to the economy factors such as better insulation which saves the owner money etc. Most people don’t really care what form of construction has been used to build the homes they choose. Generally they choose on location, decor, potential and ‘feel’.
      A spacious, energy-efficient home at an affordable price close to local services will help it keep value no matter what its built from in my opinion.
      Thanks for commenting :-)

  • http://www.mypropertymentor.co.uk/ Roberta Ward

    Thanks for you comment and for further details. Hope the project does well. We need more of this type of housing instead of relying on brick and tile so heavily.

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