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Low carbon, water-efficient house retrofits: an emergent niche?
Rising carbon and water footprints of housing present a significant policy challenge across the Westernized world, and this has led to a growing range of government policies and programmes designed to promote greater residential energy and water efficiency. An analysis of low carbon/energy renovations is presented based on interviews with homeowner renovators and project managers in Australia. The renovators included self-declared ‘green renovators’ and other, more typical ‘general’ renovators. The project managers included a range of builders, designers, coordinators and retrofitters who provided specialized low carbon/water renovation services. Using the idea of niches and multilayer perspective (MLP), the analysis reveals both the limits to government initiatives promoting low carbon/water renovations and the importance of aspirations and relations in the low carbon/water housing renovation niche. The use of deep enquiry using semi-structured interviews reveals a detailed picture of these relations that cross the ‘supply’ and ‘demand’ sides of housing renovation. These relations reveal interdependence and tensions that profoundly shape low carbon/water renovations. Such relations should be explicitly accounted for in the design of government programmes and regulations.
Low carbon, water-efficient house retrofits: an emergent niche?
Rising carbon and water footprints of housing present a significant policy challenge across the Westernized world, and this has led to a growing range of government policies and programmes designed to promote greater residential energy and water efficiency. An analysis of low carbon/energy renovations is presented based on interviews with homeowner renovators and project managers in Australia. The renovators included self-declared ‘green renovators’ and other, more typical ‘general’ renovators. The project managers included a range of builders, designers, coordinators and retrofitters who provided specialized low carbon/water renovation services. Using the idea of niches and multilayer perspective (MLP), the analysis reveals both the limits to government initiatives promoting low carbon/water renovations and the importance of aspirations and relations in the low carbon/water housing renovation niche. The use of deep enquiry using semi-structured interviews reveals a detailed picture of these relations that cross the ‘supply’ and ‘demand’ sides of housing renovation. These relations reveal interdependence and tensions that profoundly shape low carbon/water renovations. Such relations should be explicitly accounted for in the design of government programmes and regulations.
Low carbon, water-efficient house retrofits: an emergent niche?
Horne, Ralph (author) / Maller, Cecily (author) / Dalton, Tony (author)
Building Research & Information ; 42 ; 539-548
2014-07-04
10 pages
Article (Journal)
Electronic Resource
English
Low carbon, water-efficient house retrofits: an emergent niche?
British Library Online Contents | 2014
|Low carbon, water-efficient house retrofits: an emergent niche?
Online Contents | 2014
|Low carbon, water-efficient house retrofits: an emergent niche?
British Library Online Contents | 2014
|