Abstract

ApartmentTallinn larger housing estates in apartment associations, building buildingsApartment associations, building in large urban housing estates constitute a large share of the housing supply. Most apartment buildings that are located in housing estates are over 30 years old and, for the most part, only minor refurbishmentRefurbishment work has been carried out on them so far. Common problems for these apartment buildingsApartment buildings are high energy consumption levels and poor indoor climate conditions. Although research has shown that the condition of load-bearing constructions is satisfactory, some problems do exist which are related to the degradation of facades and balconies. When it comes to restoring these buildings, two different approaches have been discussed in Estonia : demolishing the old buildings and replacing them with brand new apartment buildingsApartment buildings; or refurbishing the existing buildings. The vision which prefers the demolitionDemolition ofMoscow demolition of apartment buildings the old apartment buildingsApartment buildings and the construction of new buildings has not been realised in practice thanks to the high costs involved, and also due in part to the apartments being privately owned. The economic and environmental reasons favour an intensive refurbishmentRefurbishment of the existing buildings. The costs involved in such an intensive level of refurbishmentRefurbishment work are approximately three or four times lower than they would be for putting up a brand new apartment buildingApartment buildings. From the environmental aspect, rebuilding is also not particularly reasonable thanks to the much higher energy and carbon footprint involved in the use of new building materials. RefurbishmentRefurbishment has also generated positive effects on the macroeconomic level, as quantified in terms of job creation and tax returns. In practical terms, refurbishmentRefurbishment has been the only feasible solution when it comes to modernising apartment buildingsApartment associations, building.

Highlights

  • Apartment buildings in large urban housing estates constitute a large share of the housing supply

  • High energy consumption levels and poor indoor climate are not the only problems when it comes to existing apartment buildings

  • There are visions which involve the demolition of old apartment buildings and building new ones

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Summary

16.1 Refurbishment Motivators

There are various approaches to renovating apartment buildings in housing estates. Carry out refurbishment work on a building-by-building basis. On a single building level, refurbishment work is substantially cheaper than erecting a brand new construction. The number of apartment buildings on housing estates makes refurbishment the more favourable solution due to the enormous construction capacity required for a new build. The refurbishment of existing apartment buildings has been the aim of the housing policy in Estonia. The grant scheme allows the creation of energy-efficient building policies through technical research-based requirements for the refurbishment work. The grant scheme has macroeconomic effects in terms of tax returns and job creation. Another important factor is the mobilisation of private-sector investments.

16.2 Estonian Apartment Building Stock
16.4 Refurbishment Grant Schemes in Estonia
16.6 The Impact upon Households of Refurbishment Work
16.7 Refurbishment Bottlenecks
Findings
16.8 Conclusions
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