Jeff Colley

Jeff Colley is the editor of Passive House Plus. He won the Green Leader award at the 2010 Green Awards for his advocacy work on the inclusion of energy ratings in property advertising, and a proposal to finance energy upgrades via utility bills.

He established Construct Ireland (for a sustainable future), Ireland's pioneering sustainable building magazine, in 2003. The magazine evolved into Passive House Plus in late 2012, the world's first English language magazine focused on passive house, as well as other aspects of sustainable building.

He is also a founder of Éasca, (the Environmental and Sustainable Construction Association) , an organisation set up to develop and promote a membership of approved companies offering genuinely sustainable solutions.

He writes a regular column for the Sunday Times, and has authored, co-authored and contributed to articles on sustainable building for numerous newspapers including the Irish Times, The Sunday Business Post, the Irish Examiner & the Sunday Tribune.

Tuesday, 06 July 2010 00:00

Where are the BERs?

A hugely underwhelming 20,988 building energy ratings (BERs) have been issued for new homes in total since the scheme started, according to the latest SEAI domestic BER status report.
 
BERs have been mandatory since 1 Jan 2007 for all new homes either at the point of offer on a new house or prior to the first occupancy in the case of a self-builder.

Such a low figure may in part be explained by planning exemptions - if you applied for planning prior to 1 january 2007 and your house was substantially complete by 30 June 2008, you would have been exempt from the requirement to have a  BER.

And of course the housing market has tailed off spectacularly over the last few years. However 51,274 house completions were logged in 2007, 26,420 in 2008, and 20,357 in the first three quarters of 2009, according to the Department of the Environment's housing statistics bulletin.

Many if not most of the 51,274 houses built in 2008 were probably exempt from the BER requirement. It's also possible that some of the housing completions from 2009 and even 2010 were "substantially complete" - namely constructed up to wall plate level - by 30 June 2008. In spite of all of the permutations of exempted properties, the thought nonetheless persists that a total of less than 21,000 BERs for new homes is some distance short of total compliance.

How can this be verified? Is there a way to get data not just on house completions, but on the planning application and completion dates in each case? What hope can we have that the 2008 building regulations are being complied with if people aren't even bothering to get a BER?

Thursday, 03 June 2010 13:30

International Selections

International case studies
Newly inaugurated RIAI president Paul Keogh selects four diverse UK projects that integrate sustainability without compromising on design

wind_turbine.jpg
The Sustainable Energy Authority of Ireland (SEAI) has announced that Ireland's renewable energy production is growing, and claimed that Ireland is "one of the world’s leading countries in the use of wind energy for electricity generation".

serve.jpgOver Eur1 million per week in energy retrofit grants are currently being paid out by the Sustainable Energy Authority of Ireland (SEAI), a government official has said.

Wednesday, 03 March 2010 00:00

Examining Britain's pay-as-you-save scheme

Just a quick update today, as the deadline for our next issue is approaching rapidly. Anyone interested in reading more about the pay-as-you-save programme launched in Britain yesterday should take a look at the official press release. The plans seem quite ambitious - ambitious enough to make you wonder if the amount of work that's being planned can be done properly in such a short space of time. Are the skills and expertise available and ready?

These figures caught my eye particularly:

The strategy will be implemented in a three stage plan:

  • To insulate 6 million homes by the end of 2011
  • To have insulated all practical lofts and cavity walls by 2015
  • To have offered up to 7 million eco upgrades by 2020; all homes to have smart meters.

According to the Guardian yesterday:

Under legislation proposed today, homeowners would be able to take out loans for thousands of pounds to install loft or wall insulation or solar panels. These loans would be fixed against the home, so that if the borrower moved out, they would not have to continue to pay.

The new owner would inherit the annual charge to pay for the green measures, but would also continue to benefit from the resulting lower energy bills. The government said that the finance – expected to come from retailers such as B&Q and banks including the Co-op – would initially be available on a small scale from 2012, although this would improve.


 

 

Designers and contractors looking to keep ahead of the competition no longer have to leave Ireland to learn about cutting edge sustainable design, with the launch of a new academy specialising in passive house design.

Established by leading Irish passive house advocate Tomás O'Leary of Mosart, the Wicklow-based Irish Passive House Academy is accredited by the creators of the passive house standard - Darmstadt's Passivhaus Institut - to provide training and the pertinent internationally-accredited qualification of certified European passive house designer.
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The finalists have been announced for the 2010 Green Awards, with a shortlist consisting of a diverse range of companies and organisations from across Irish society.

Construct Ireland has been shortlisted for two awards at the event, which will be held at the Burlington Hotel on 11 March. The magazine is a finalist for the green communications award along with Belvedere House Gardens and Park, Dell Exposure Media Services, Greenme.ie  and Weee Ireland. Construct Ireland editor Jeff Colley is up for the green leader award along with Citi head of facilities Paul Boylan, Greenbusiness.ie project director Kara Flannery, Siemens CEO Dr Werner Kruckow, Vintners Federation director Sean Redmond and Vodafone Ireland CEO Charles Butterworth.
Thursday, 21 January 2010 00:00

Green building & energy links, Jan 21

The January issue has finally gone to the printers, albeit a bit later then we'd have liked. Still, it should be hitting desks and newstands early next week. In the mean time, here's the usual links round-up.

Skip the daily commute with an OfficePOD: Jetson Green
1850s US house gets green upgrade: Jetson Green
Jerry Yudelson's top ten green building trends for 2010: Jetson Green
Natural bark shingles for external cladding? Jetson Green
Innovative financing for energy upgrades: Green Building Advisor
Recycled weapons used for construction in London: Inhabitat
Are shipping containers an answer to the accommodation crisis in Haiti (including an interesting discussion on providing housing in post-disaster situations): Treehugger

Friday, 08 January 2010 00:00

Testing Google's Powermeter software

Just a quick post this morning as our January print deadline consumes me. I've mentioned Google's Powermeter home energy monitoring software on the blog before. Now Adam Vaughan gives it a test for the Guardian. He writes:

It's not been an entirely pleasant experience. While I had it setup in 10 minutes – using a small hub and sensor from British company AlertMe to plug into my web connection – seeing my electricity use on an iGoogle page alongside my email, news, RSS and other widgets was sometimes a scary reminder of our profligacy.

Our house typically rests at around 150 watts running a computer, fridge and a couple of lights, but it's not uncommon for that to jump up to more like 3kW (3,000 watts) with the washing machine and dishwasher running simultaneously. In December as a whole, the Powermeter graph reminded my daily, we used a shockingly high 370 kWh – but fortunately December's also probably our highest month for energy use, because it's one of the darkest and the one where we're most frequently at home.

Interestingly, he also suggests:
Ultimately, the really interesting stuff for this technology will come when all this data gets shared socially – and results in the sharing of advice and the application of peer pressure to make people change their habits.

 

 

 

Monday, 16 November 2009 00:00

Ten principles of low energy building

Martin Holladay has posted a very good guide to the basics of low energy building & retrofit on GreenBuildingAdvisor.com. He wisely avoids mentioning too much green "bling" and instead focuses on smart design and a well-insulated, air tight envelope. The basic principles? Don't build too big, orient the house correctly, choose the right windows, design an air-tight layer and insulate well.
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