Eine Plattform für die Wissenschaft: Bauingenieurwesen, Architektur und Urbanistik
Supporting Sustainable Home Improvement in the Private Rental Sector: The View of Investors
In this article, we examine the problem of how to support energy and water saving upgrades for sustainable home improvement in Australia's private rental sector. The study focuses on the views of private rental investors in recognition that tenant actions to minimise energy and water use are constrained by existing housing infrastructure. Moreover, it is the investor who bears the cost of any substantive improvements. The study is based on consultation with 52 private rental investors. While participants expressed broad support for sustainable home improvement, they also identified significant barriers to such investment including: high upfront and maintenance costs, lack of knowledge about the most effective energy and water saving options; the under-developed role of real estate agents in facilitating sustainable upgrades; and difficulties in obtaining consent across common and strata-titled property. In addition, our consultation highlighted the diverse nature of the sector, with some of the most intractable problems located in low-cost, ageing, strata-titled flats and units. While all segments of the market require consistency and stability in policy settings, there is a need for more specific consideration of the needs of investors and tenants in low-cost housing and strata-titled properties.
Supporting Sustainable Home Improvement in the Private Rental Sector: The View of Investors
In this article, we examine the problem of how to support energy and water saving upgrades for sustainable home improvement in Australia's private rental sector. The study focuses on the views of private rental investors in recognition that tenant actions to minimise energy and water use are constrained by existing housing infrastructure. Moreover, it is the investor who bears the cost of any substantive improvements. The study is based on consultation with 52 private rental investors. While participants expressed broad support for sustainable home improvement, they also identified significant barriers to such investment including: high upfront and maintenance costs, lack of knowledge about the most effective energy and water saving options; the under-developed role of real estate agents in facilitating sustainable upgrades; and difficulties in obtaining consent across common and strata-titled property. In addition, our consultation highlighted the diverse nature of the sector, with some of the most intractable problems located in low-cost, ageing, strata-titled flats and units. While all segments of the market require consistency and stability in policy settings, there is a need for more specific consideration of the needs of investors and tenants in low-cost housing and strata-titled properties.
Supporting Sustainable Home Improvement in the Private Rental Sector: The View of Investors
Gabriel, Michelle (Autor:in) / Watson, Phillipa (Autor:in)
Urban Policy and Research ; 30 ; 309-325
01.09.2012
17 pages
Aufsatz (Zeitschrift)
Elektronische Ressource
Englisch
The private rental sector: Problems, prospects and policy
Taylor & Francis Verlag | 1983
|The future of the private rental sector in Sweden
British Library Online Contents | 1998
|The Private Rental Sector in Australia: Living with Uncertainty
Taylor & Francis Verlag | 2022
|The future of the private rental sector in Sweden
Online Contents | 1998
|Globalization, de-industrialization and Hong Kong's private rental sector
Online Contents | 2006
|