1st Edition
Sustainable Building Conservation Theory and Practice of Responsive Design in the Heritage Environment
This book incorporates UK and international case studies and essays to identify the overlaps in the interests of energy and building conservation.
The relevance and adjustments of qualitative and quantitative frames of reference are introduced, alongside the various expertise of the contributors: architects, designers, conservation consultants and academics. The second part of the book showcases sustainable domestic and non-domestic heritage projects, translating the preceding research into information that practitioners can use in their everyday work.
The book will appeal to architecture students, newly qualified professionals and conservation architects and will enhance readers’ ambitions, so that they feel equipped and inspired to work with old buildings sensitively, creatively and sustainably.
Part 1: Evaluations- (Theories)
1. The English Climate and Enduring Principles of Environmental Design
Dean Hawkes
2. The Energy Context of Domestic Traditional Buildings for the UK
Simon Lannon
3. Retrofitting Heritage Buildings
Peter Cox
4. Containing the Questions
Douglas Kent
Part 2: Responses- Practices
5. An Integrated Approach To Heritage And Sustainability: Four Academic Building Projects in the USA
Tom Hotaling
6. New Court Trinity College Cambridge: Continuing a legacy of inhabitation
Oliver Smith
7. Four Case Studies Demonstrating the Impacts of Energy Conservation in Traditional Domestic Buildings
Oriel Prizeman
8. Sustaining Heating in Places of Worship: Physical, Social, Organizational and Commercial Factors as Determinants of Strategic Decision Making and Practical Outcomes
Bruce Induni
Part 3: Conclusions Potential for Further Research
Oriel Prizeman
Biography
Oriel Prizeman is a RIBA Accredited Conservation Architect trained at Cambridge and the Architectural Association. She ran her own practice focusing on work to listed houses in the Cambridge area from 1996-2012 and has established a new MSc in Sustainable Building Conservation at the Welsh School of Architecture, Cardiff in September 2013.
"The information is easily accessible; the section on daub, for example, describes its preparation, including merits of hay and straw, and the different lengths to which each should be chopped. The method given for temporary support of a leaning cob wall is an example of the practical advice found throughout."
Simon Malam, Donald Insall Associates, Historic England