Skip to main contentAccess keys help

[an error occurred while processing this directive]
BBC News
Launch consoleBBC NEWS CHANNEL
Last Updated: Tuesday, 3 April 2007, 17:00 GMT 18:00 UK
The house that helps the environment
Computer mock-up of the C60 house
Computer mock-up of the C60 house
Steel and polystyrene are not materials usually associated with house building.

But a group of students from the University of Nottingham have come up with a radical new approach.

It's part of a plan by the government to make all new homes 'carbon neutral' - in other words to have no effect on the environment.

  • Watch again from the link to the right
  • And we'll be following the progress of the house and the students building it over the coming months
  • The new house, replaces traditional bricks and mortar with polystyrene encased in a steel frame.

    The project is known as the C60 house which should cut carbon emissions by a minimum of 60% on the typical UK home.

    The government wants all new homes to be carbon neutral in 10 years and the C60 home will achieve this by:

  • Using a rainwater tank on the roof - bathwater will be reused in the toilet cutting water use by 70%
  • All appliances and lighting will be low energy cutting electricity use by 60%
  • The house has extra insulation as well as using air heated deep under the basement- cutting on heating bills by 70%

    The key to having a 'green' house depends both on how it is built, and with what materials.

    Carbon neutral houses help prevent damage to the environment and have the additional bonus of saving home-owners' energy bills.



  • VIDEO AND AUDIO NEWS
    Sarah Campbell looks at the C60 house



    SEE ALSO
    Low carb family: Insulation
    16 Mar 07 |  Breakfast

    RELATED INTERNET LINKS
    The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites


    FEATURES, VIEWS, ANALYSIS
    Has China's housing bubble burst?
    How the world's oldest clove tree defied an empire
    Why Royal Ballet principal Sergei Polunin quit

    PRODUCTS & SERVICES

    bannerwatch listenbbc sportAmericasAfricaEuropeMiddle EastSouth AsiaAsia Pacific