Energy Efficient Renovation
Energy performance is now central to modern renovation. Comfort, running costs, carbon reduction, and property value all depend on how well the building envelope and services work together.
Fabric First
The fabric-first approach improves walls, roofs, floors, windows, airtightness, and thermal bridges before relying on larger heating systems. In older UK properties with solid walls, insulation needs careful moisture management. In many European climates, summer overheating must be considered as seriously as winter heat loss.
Heating and Hot Water
Heat pumps, modern condensing boilers, underfloor heating, low-temperature radiators, thermal stores, and smart controls all have a place. The right system depends on insulation, property size, hot-water demand, local energy prices, and available outdoor or plant space.
Ventilation and Indoor Air
As homes become more airtight, ventilation becomes essential. Extract fans, humidity control, trickle vents, demand-controlled ventilation, and mechanical ventilation with heat recovery can protect the building and improve indoor air quality.
Glazing, Solar and Controls
High-performance glazing, shading, solar PV, battery storage, and smart controls can reduce energy waste, but they should be designed as part of the whole property. A well-renovated home should feel comfortable without constant adjustment.