
NHBC Foundation
NHBC Foundation
5 Projects, page 1 of 1
assignment_turned_in Project2015 - 2017Partners:University of Reading, National House Building Council, NHBC Foundation, Barratt Developments PLC, The Home Builders Federation +11 partnersUniversity of Reading,National House Building Council,NHBC Foundation,Barratt Developments PLC,The Home Builders Federation,NHBC Foundation,Zero Carbon Hub,UNIVERSITY OF READING,Zero Carbon Hub,Barratt Developments (United Kingdom),Structural Timber Association,Constructing Excellence,[no title available],Constructing Excellence,Structural Timber Association (STA),The Home Builders FederationFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: ES/M000249/1Funder Contribution: 408,191 GBPThe proposed research explores the significant challenge which the carbon reduction agenda poses for UK house builders. Focusing on the development of new products and processes at the project level and their diffusion across a large multi-regional firm we will ask key research questions that include: How can construction firms take advantage of project-level innovations? How can they meet the challenges which progressive carbon reduction targets currently pose? How do these innovations travel across large, complex firms? And how do standards shape innovations and how do innovations feed into ongoing changes in standard practice? The proposed research explores these questions by examining the development, uptake and diffusion of technical innovations from Hanham Hall, an experimental housing development which Barratt Developments has used to address the 2016 requirement that all new homes meet a zero-carbon standard. Barratt Developments is one of the largest house builders in the UK. The house builder has four brands and had an average of around 400 active sites at any one time across 25 divisions. The question of how specific technical innovations from Hanham Hall are being diffused and stabilised across Barratt Developments addresses some of the core challenges for the mainstreaming of zero-carbon standard buildings. While many scholars highlight the challenges of cross-project learning and the diffusion of innovations, little empirical or theoretical work has been done on the 'anchoring of innovations' at the firm-level. Similarly, little work has been done on the travel of innovations across projects within a large, multi-regional firm. This problem is especially pressing when one takes into account the ambitious upcoming carbon reduction targets and the largely organisational nature of the challenge. As a number of observers have noted, the sector knows how to build low-carbon buildings on experimental developments; what it does not know how to do is to incorporate that know-how into standard practice. The research questions are informed by the application of actor-network theory and neo-institutionalism to the study of key technical innovations at Hanham Hall across Barratt Developments: (1) to identify and explain the development of a number of key product and process innovations at Hanham Hall in response to carbon reduction requirements; (2) to examine the impact of those innovations on firm-level practices (including supply chains, procurement, internal management systems, business models, policies and strategies); (3) to follow the introduction of those innovations into other Barratt Developments housing projects and to document similarities and differences in project-level accommodation to those elements; (4) to use this analysis to theorise processes of innovation, diffusion and stabilisation/institutionalisation (in firm-level strategies, systems and practices) within large, project-based firms; and, (5) to contrast the findings produced by the deployment of neo-institutionalism and actor-network theory in the study of a single complex empirical case. The focal case study research will draw upon the analysis of documents, relevant artefacts, in-depth interviews and observations. The analysis of these sources will allow the team to trace the associations and movement of people and objects across multiple Barratt Development sites.
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For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.euassignment_turned_in Project2017 - 2023Partners:DHSC, Min of Housing Communities and Local Gov, UCL, National House Building Council, Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government +34 partnersDHSC,Min of Housing Communities and Local Gov,UCL,National House Building Council,Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government,NHBC Foundation,Feilden Clegg Bradley Studios (United Kingdom),SIA,Government of the United Kingdom,Department for Culture Media and Sport,UK Government,Department for Digital, Culture, Media & Sport,NHBC Foundation,PHE,UKCIP,Allford Hall Monaghan Morris (AHMM),SI,IHBC (Inst of Historic Building Conserv),AHR Architects,Allford Hall Monaghan Morris (United Kingdom),BURO HAPPOLD LIMITED,Department for Communities and Local Gov,CIBSE,Library of Congress,BuroHappold (United Kingdom),PUBLIC HEALTH ENGLAND,GLA,Public Health England,Chartered Institution of Building Services Engineers,Greater London Authority (GLA),Buro Happold Limited,Feilden Clegg Bradley Studio,UK ATOMIC ENERGY AUTHORITY,Institute Of Historic Building Conservation,Feilden Clegg Bradley Studio,UKCIP,Library of Congress,AHR Global (UK),Smithsonian InstitutionFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/P022405/1Funder Contribution: 1,564,040 GBPThe first Complex Built Environment Systems (CBES) Platform Grant consolidated a truly interdisciplinary, world-leading research group which focussed on the complexity of the context of our research activities and seeded a new Institute (UCL Energy). The second Platform Grant underpinned the development of a strategic programme of fundamental research aimed at understanding the unintended consequences of decarbonising the built environment, enabled CBES to become a world leader in this area and seeded three new UCL Institutes (Environmental Design & Engineering, Sustainable Heritage and Sustainable Resources). Supported by a third Platform Grant, our vision for CBES is now to transform scientific understanding of the systemic nature of a sustainable built environment. In a recent award-winning paper, resulting from our work under the current Platform Grant, we identified over 100 unintended consequences of energy efficiency interventions in homes. Taking moisture as just one example, we can demonstrate why a systems thinking approach is now so vital. By 2030, it will be government policy that every home in the UK will benefit from measures to improve energy efficiency. This is approximately 25 million homes - all our homes will be affected in some way. The total cost will be ~ £10 billion a year. The UK only has the chance once to do this correctly. Unfortunately, it is now clear that we are not dealing with these complex issues correctly. For example, a recent low energy refurbishment of ~400 dwellings in the north of England has had a 100% failure rate due to disastrous moisture issues which will cost millions to rectify. This has huge implications for the entire decarbonisation plan, for the health of the building occupants, for the communities involved and for the economic value of these properties. For the issue of moisture therefore, we have taken the decisive step to set up the new 'UK Centre for Moisture in Buildings' to link building engineering physics, health, building use, quality and process in a coherent way. Our thesis therefore, more widely, is that the built environment is a complex system that can only be successfully tackled via a new interdisciplinary systems thinking approach - performance emerges from the interplay of fundamental engineering and physical factors with process and structure. Such a systems thinking process was piloted in our project 'Housing, Energy and Wellbeing' (HEW) in the current Platform Grant and has led to close collaboration with a very large body of stakeholders from government, industry, NGOs and community groups who provide an invaluable resource for future research. Enabling this new, systemically integrated approach to built environment research will require a major change in the way we undertake our research - this will be a fundamental departure from business as usual. The development of such a novel methodological framework and the associated re-structuring and development of an interdisciplinary research group will involve a strategic, long-term perspective as well as some risk. The flexible Platform funding will be vital here in that it will enable approaches not possible with responsive mode funding. There are also likely to be some key policy changes in this specific area over the next 5 years - Platform funding will enable us to react to research opportunities in a timely manner and dynamically maintain research leadership in the field. The careers of CBES team members will be managed and developed through strategic action. Career development activities specifically enabled by Platform funding will include: (i) a new series of regular 'systems thinking' workshops to develop personal research agendas within our broader system of research; (ii) new industrial/policy mentoring via secondments; (iii) new skills training for staff through external training courses; (iv) enhanced stakeholder engagement via our unique series of regular workshops.
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For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.euassignment_turned_in Project2020 - 2024Partners:University of Edinburgh, Good Homes Alliance, OYKS, Norwich City Council, NHS Health Scotland +40 partnersUniversity of Edinburgh,Good Homes Alliance,OYKS,Norwich City Council,NHS Health Scotland,Sustainable Scotland Network,Health Protection Scotland,Housing Learning and Improvement Network,NHBC Foundation,City of Edinburgh Council,Cambridge Environmental Research Consultants (United Kingdom),SCOTTISH ENVIRONMENT PROTECTION AGENCY,National House Building Council,Energy Saving Trust,Edinburgh Centre for Carbon Innovation,Australian National University (ANU),Edinburgh Centre for Carbon Innovation,MET OFFICE,CITY OF EDINBURGH COUNCIL,Celotex Saint-Gobain,CIBSE,Met Office,NHBC Foundation,Celotex Saint-Gobain,Health Facilities Scotland,Passivhaus Trust,National Health Service Scotland,Passivhaus Trust,HPS,Met Office,Chartered Institution of Building Services Engineers,Cambridge Environmental Research Consult,Age UK,Norwich City Council,City of Edinburgh Council,SEPA,Australian National University,Sustainable Scotland Network,Age UK,EST,Housing Learning and Improvement Network,Health Facilities Scotland,UEA,Cambridge Env Res Consultants Ltd (CERC),Good Homes Alliance (United Kingdom)Funder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: NE/V002090/1Funder Contribution: 507,898 GBPThe 2019 Climate Change Act committed the UK to reducing its emissions of greenhouse gases to net zero by 2050. The 2019 UK Clean Air Strategy, sees "air pollution as one of the UK's biggest public health challenges", aims to secure clean growth whilst tackling air pollution through reducing emissions. Achieving these reductions in greenhouse gas and air pollutant emissions will entail substantial reductions in use of fossil fuels and changes to the transport fleet over coming years as we make the transition to a 'low carbon economy'. This will also have an important benefit for health of improving levels of outdoor air pollution by reducing emissions from power plants, motor vehicles, wood/coal burning at home and other sources. However, another important climate change action is to improve energy efficiency in homes. Those measures typically entail reducing levels of ventilation to cut down heat losses from escape of heated air. In addition to helping improve winter indoor temperatures, this can be beneficial for human health because it reduces the penetration into the home of air pollutants from the outdoor environment. But it will increase indoor levels of air pollutants derived from sources inside the home - such as particles and gases generated by cooking, volatile organic compounds (VOCs) given off from fabrics and furnishings, cleaning and personal care products. The changes to indoor pollution levels from improved home energy efficiency may thus be overall positive or negative for the health of building occupants depending on the balance of effects on pollutants entering and leaving the indoor environment. That balance is likely to depend on the levels of outdoor pollutants, indoor air pollutant sources and activities that generate these, the form of the energy efficiency improvements, the behaviour of occupants and their vulnerability to air pollutants. People at particular risk are young children, the elderly, those with pre-existing illnesses, and those experiencing social deprivation. To improve understanding of these issues, we have created a new research network (acronym 'HEICCAAM'). This network brings together experienced and early career researchers from nine universities from disciplines as diverse as air quality measurement and modelling, building physics, behavioural science, health and health inequalities, education and policy. The network will also include representatives of the public, as well as stakeholders from the public sector, business/industry and non-government bodies - including Public Health England, Health Protection and NHS Scotland, Scottish Environment Protection Agency, Age UK, the Passivhaus Trust, Good Homes Alliance, Edinburgh City Council, the Chartered Institution of Building Services Engineers and the UK Met Office. The network will build evidence on the consequences for exposure to air pollution of actions aimed at tackling climate change and poor air quality, with particular focus on the home environment. Its aim is to provide underpinning research that can inform and influence policy and practice to safeguard human health. The network will include activities by six Working Groups tasked with generating a series of papers on relevant issues of science and policy. It will also undertake four small research projects aimed at improving understanding of key issues where there are knowledge gaps. It will have a particular focus on protecting the health of vulnerable groups and reduction of health inequities. Network members will have multiple interactions through electronic meetings, webinars, discussion groups and an annual meeting and workshop with a wider group of stakeholders. Through its activities, the network will help build long-term capability in interdisciplinary research in this area, including through the interactions with early career researchers, the development of new research plans, and linkage to other networks and existing research programmes.
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For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.euassignment_turned_in Project2019 - 2028Partners:Electronic Arts (United Kingdom), Allford Hall Monaghan Morris (AHMM), Chartered Institution of Building Services Engineers, UCL, DHSC +50 partnersElectronic Arts (United Kingdom),Allford Hall Monaghan Morris (AHMM),Chartered Institution of Building Services Engineers,UCL,DHSC,Architype Limited,Melius Homes Limited,National House Building Council,Atelier Ten,Feilden Clegg Bradley Studios (United Kingdom),NHBC Foundation,Willmott Dixon Energy Services Ltd,Electron,EDF Energy Plc (UK),Dept for Sci, Innovation & Tech (DSIT),AECOM Limited (UK),Chameleon Technology UK Ltd,DesignBuilder Software (United Kingdom),Dept for Business, Innovation and Skills,PassivSystems (United Kingdom),IGLOO Energy Supply Limited,Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy,Building Research Establishment,Melius Homes Limited,IGLOO Energy Supply Limited,NHBC Foundation,UCC,PUBLIC HEALTH ENGLAND,Architype Ltd,Chameleon Technology UK Ltd,BuroHappold (United Kingdom),PRP Architects Ltd,Willmott Dixon Energy Services Ltd,PHE,Feilden Clegg Bradley Studio,Willmott Dixon (United Kingdom),UK Aecom,PassivSystems Limited,Atelier Ten,Public Health England,BRE Trust (Building Res Excellence),CIBSE,David Vincent & Associates Ltd,Hoare Lea (United Kingdom),PRP Architects (United Kingdom),Hoare Lea,EDF Energy (United Kingdom),EDF Energy (United Kingdom),DesignBuilder Software Ltd,Buro Happold Limited,Feilden Clegg Bradley Studio,BRE Trust,BURO HAPPOLD LIMITED,Allford Hall Monaghan Morris (United Kingdom),Aecom (United Kingdom)Funder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/S021671/1Funder Contribution: 6,019,790 GBPThe UK is on the brink of a new, third age of energy efficiency. UK greenhouse gas emissions must fall a further 65% by 2050, but the energy system will decarbonise even faster. Large wind, marine and solar generators, supported by energy storage, will dominate the central supply system and intelligent, community and building-integrated systems will be embedded in our towns and cities. This interaction of people, buildings and energy systems will transform the relationship between supply and demand. Our domestic and non-domestic buildings can no longer be passive consumers of heat and power, instead, our homes and businesses must participate actively in a flexible, integrated, low-carbon supply and demand system, buying, selling and storing heat and power to achieve 'Energy resilience through security, integration, demand management and decarbonisation'. This must be achieved whilst simultaneously meeting our human need for high quality spaces in which to live and work, thereby increasing the productivity of the UK economy, reducing fuel poverty, improving health and wellbeing, and supporting an ageing population. The new EPSRC CDT in Energy Resilience and the Built Environment (ERBE) will train at least 50 PhD graduates to understand the systemic, radical, multi and interdisciplinary challenges we face, and have the leadership credentials to effect change. Students will be immersed in world-leading research environments at UCL, Loughborough University collaborating with the Centre for Marine and Renewable Energy in Ireland. ERBE students will attain a depth of understanding only possible as cohorts work and learn together. An integrated, 4-year programme will be co-created with our stakeholder partners and students. It will provide the knowledge, research and transferable skills to enable outstanding graduates from physics to social sciences to pursue research in one of three themes: * Flexibility and resilience: the interaction between buildings and the whole supply system, through new generation and storage technology, enabled by smart control systems and new business models. * Technology and system performance: demand reduction and decarbonisation of the built environment through design, construction methods, technological innovation, monitoring and regulation. * Comfort, health and well-being: buildings and energy systems that create productive work environments and affordable, clean, safe homes. The Centre will be led by Directors who have worked together for over 30 years, supported by deputies, academic managers, administrators and a course development team who have successfully delivered the CDT in Energy Demand. Over 50 world-leading academics are available as student supervisors. The core team will be guided by an Advisory Board representing the UK government, energy suppliers, research organisations, consultancies, construction companies and charities; more than 30 prominent individuals have expressed an interest in joining the board. Board members and stakeholders will provide secondments, business skills training and careers advice. The Centre will provide training and research benefits to the wider energy and buildings community. A new online Buildings, Energy, Resilience and Demand Hub will be created to share training materials, videos, seminars and to promote collaboration, a residential, weeklong programme, Energy Resilience and the Built Environment, will be open to PhD students from across the world as will an annual, student-led conference. An annual Anglo-Irish summer school and a colloquium will showcase the Centre's work and bring students face-to-face with potential future employers. By providing training in a rigorous, world-leading, stakeholder-shaped, outward-facing and multi-centred research environment, the new ERBE CDT will help the UK achieve the goals in the government's Industrial Strategy and Clean Growth Strategy.
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For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.euassignment_turned_in Project2014 - 2023Partners:Arup Group (United Kingdom), UK Green Building Council, Arup Group, Crest Nicholson, Chartered Institution of Building Services Engineers +58 partnersArup Group (United Kingdom),UK Green Building Council,Arup Group,Crest Nicholson,Chartered Institution of Building Services Engineers,E.ON New Build and Technology Ltd,British Board of Agrement,Willmott Dixon Energy Services Ltd,Grosvenor Ltd,British Board of Agrément,Asset Skills Council,Knauf Insulation,Knauf Insulation,SKANSKA,Asset Skills Council,UCL,Tesco,LafargeHolcim (United Kingdom),Grosvenor Ltd,Cundall Johnston & Partners,BAM Construct UK (Royal BAM Group),LafargeHolcim Group (UK) (Aggregate Ind),EDF Energy (United Kingdom),National House Building Council,Norland Managed Services Ltd.,UK Green Building Council,BAM Construction Ltd,DECC,Robust Details Limited,Energy Technologies Institute,Robust Details Limited,BAM Nuttall (United Kingdom),SE Controls,PassivSystems Limited,Cundall Johnston & Partners LLP (UK),NHBC Foundation,Barratt Developments PLC,Good Homes Alliance (United Kingdom),Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy,National Energy Foundation,The British Land Corporation,The British Land Corporation,CIBSE,EDF Energy Plc (UK),NEF,E.ON New Build and Technology Ltd,Norland Managed Services Ltd.,PassivSystems (United Kingdom),NHBC Foundation,Crest Nicholson (United Kingdom),E.ON (United Kingdom),SE Controls,Skanska (United Kingdom),Willmott Dixon Energy Services Ltd,ETI,Good Homes Alliance,Willmott Dixon (United Kingdom),Arup Group Ltd,Barratt Developments (United Kingdom),Tesco,EDF Energy (United Kingdom),Aggregate Industries,Department of Energy and Climate ChangeFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/L01517X/1Funder Contribution: 4,332,170 GBPAddressing climate change through reducing carbon emissions is a crucial international goal. End use energy demand (EUED) reduction is essential for the UK to meet its legally binding 80% carbon reduction target and has significant economic and social benefits: it lowers the operating costs of businesses, increasing their competitiveness, and reduces the fuel bills for home owners, guarding against fuel poverty and improving quality of life. Government, industry and academia recognise the importance of EUED reduction and are responding by developing new policies, products and services. However, there is a shortage of highly trained individuals who will spearhead these initiatives. Recognising this, the Engineering and Physical Science Research Council (EPSRC) has identified EUED in buildings, transport and industry as a priority funding area for the development of a Centre for Doctoral Training (CDT). For the last 4 years, the UCL Energy Institute and the School of Civil and Building Engineering at Loughborough, have run a successful CDT: the London-Loughborough Centre for Doctoral Research in Energy Demand (LoLo). The Centre is seeking funding for a further 8 years to train 60 students. The scope will be expanded beyond buildings to include energy demand in transport and industry directly related to the built environment. The new Centre will build on the existing four year programme: a one year Masters of Research in Energy Demand followed by a three year PhD. Training will be enhanced by an annual colloquium; international summer school; team building away days; seminar series'; creativity, communication and business training; and numerous other activities. Students will undertake placements with partners and in relevant overseas organisations. They will have a firm grounding in core skills and knowledge, but appreciate the multi-disciplinary perspective needed to understand the technical, economic and social factors that shape energy demand. The Centre's research will address new challenges within five themes, grouped around major research programmes: technology and systems, energy epidemiology, urban scale energy demand, building performance and process, and unintended consequences. This linkage ensures students' work gains momentum, is at the forefront of knowledge, has excellent resources, and is supported by a wide group of world class academics. The Centre will again be led by Profs Lowe and Lomas; together they have over 60 years of experience in energy and buildings. They will be supported by Academic Managers and Administrators and over 40 academic supervisors whose expertise spans the full range of disciplines necessary for EUED research: from science and engineering to ergonomics and design, psychology and sociology through to economics and politics. An Advisory Board will help steer the Centre, whilst the wider group of 26 partners, representing policy, industry, academia and NGO interests, will aid students' training by: developing projects, offering mentoring, hosting students in their organisation, giving workshops and seminars, and direct funding. The proposed new Centre represents excellent value for money. The total cost to the EPSRC to train 60 students is less than the current Centre cost to train 40 students. However, the funding per student will rise by 20%, a result of the financial commitment of our partners and host institutions. The Centre aims to have an enduring impact through our graduates and their research. Short term impact will be achieved through students' engagement with industry, policy makers, NGOs and academia through the annual Colloquium, the international summer school, publications, the web-site and other social media, working with partners and through public engagement. In the long term our graduates will help transform the EUED sector through projects they lead, the students and colleagues they will train and the organisations they influence.
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