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Zero
Carbon Homes move a Step Closer
Housing
and Planning Minister Yvette Cooper has announced details of the housebuilder
who will build England's first eco-village.
Barratt Developments PLC has been selected by English Partnerships, the
Government's National Regeneration Agency, as the preferred developer
to create a new community at the site of the former Hanham Hall Hospital
near Bristol. Homes on the site will meet the Government's most exacting
eco standard - Level 6 of the Code for Sustainable Homes.
Hanham Hall was the first site identified under the Carbon Challenge,
being run by English Partnerships as part of the Government's commitment
to tackle climate change. The Challenge will deliver zero carbon homes
and communities well in advance of this becoming mandatory 2016, and help
the housebuilding sector demonstrate that the targets are feasible and
can be commercially viable.
As well as zero-carbon homes this ground-breaking project will create
eco lifestyles. It will hand over a listed building to community use,
capture rainwater and include sustainable drainage, farmers' shops, a
car club and bicycle storage.
Yvette Cooper said:
We have set a world-beating target that all new homes must be zero
carbon by 2016. People said this couldn't be done, but, in fact, this
first Carbon Challenge site shows that developers are already preparing
to build the first major development of zero carbon homes.
We want to build more homes but also to higher standards. We've
set up plans for ten eco-towns. These Carbon Challenge eco-villages are
now leading the way, showing what can be done. This marks a revolution
in the way we design and build homes.
Steve Carr, English Partnerships' Director of Policy and Economics, said:
The winning bid isn't just environmentally sound - it brings people
into the equation to create a truly sustainable community.
We are meeting a dual goal - tackling climate change whilst improving
housing quality.
I am delighted that so many developers rose to the challenge. The winning
bid by Barratt tipped the balance because they thought about eco-living
not just eco-buildings.
Mark Clare, Chief Executive, Barratt Developments PLC said:
Barratt fully supports the zero carbon objective and we want to
make as big a contribution as we can as quickly as we can. We are delighted
to be asked to deliver this ground-breaking project, which will be the
first large-scale zero carbon community in the country. It will enable
a family occupying one of these homes to reduce their entire carbon footprint
by 60 per cent.
Hanham Hall is a 6.6 hectare former hospital site near Bristol, incorporating
a Grade II listed building. It is anticipated that the site will support
up to 200 homes, of which at least a third will be affordable, as well
as retail floor space and employment space. The onsite biomass CHP plant
will deliver energy to all homes.
The minister also unveiled the six shortlisted bidders for the second
Carbon Challenge site - South Bank Phase 1, in Peterborough; and two new
sites in the North of England.
The shortlisted developers for South Bank Phase 1 are:
* One Peterborough (a consortium of Crest Nicholson and Bioregional)
* Gladedale Group
* Carbon Challenge Consortium (Galliford Try and Cross Key Homes)
* Barratt Homes Ltd
* P Pod (Morris Homes and Gentoo)
* Gleeson Homes and Stuart Milne Group
The shortlisted developers will now be invited to submit a more detailed
response to achieve Level 6 of the Code, by achieving zero carbon, incorporating
features to reduce water usage and energy consumption, minimising waste,
and increasing biodiversity. A decision on the final preferred developer
at South Bank Phase 1 is expected early next year.
The two new Carbon Challenge sites announced last week are both in former
coalfield communities, devastated by pit closures in the 1980s - Brodsworth
Colliery in Doncaster and Bickershaw Colliery in Wigan. Expressions of
interest in both sites will be invited via OJEU in January.
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