Abstract

Heat loss through party walls to outside (not the neighbouring dwelling) has received considerable attention in the UK, and this was flagged as a serious omission from the UK Building Regulations in 2010-12. There was evidence of significant heat loss between adjoined terraced or semi-detached new homes, which was increasingly important as heat loss from other parts of dwellings was being reduced. As a result, Building Regulations were changed so that other parts of the building envelope had to be improved in new homes to compensate for heat loss through the party wall. However, this empirical work based on measuring heat loss through the party walls of 55 UK dwellings indicates that fears about high heat loss through party walls may have been exaggerated. While a minority of dwellings (less than 10%) do suffer from a “thermal bypass” through the party wall, for the vast majority of existing homes with party walls, heat loss through the party wall is minimal. There may be a case for revising UK Building Regulations to reflect this new evidence, and for re-directing the efforts aimed at reducing heat loss through party walls towards other opportunities to improve the energy efficiency of dwellings.

Highlights

  • There may be a case for revising UK Building Regulations to reflect this new evidence, and for re-directing the efforts aimed at reducing heat loss through party walls towards other opportunities to improve the energy efficiency of dwellings

  • The party walls were not drawn clearly enough to show the wall construction in planning drawings, so we examined planning applications for more than 2000 new homes in total, the party-wall construction was only visible in 1076 cases, see Table 1 below

  • Evidence about the actual heat loss through party walls of different types—which helps to quantify what savings could be realised if large numbers of homes have their party walls upgraded

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Summary

Objectives

The aim of this work was to improve understanding of heat loss through party walls in existing homes, and to understand the range and distribution of party-wall heat loss in different types of dwelling and built with different types of party-wall construction

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