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Level six homes for Birmingham tenants
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In Birmingham, work is due to start on the city's first zero carbon homes as part of the final phase of building on the Nimmings Farm Estate, following the sale of land to West Mercia Homes Limited. The development of 48 affordable homes, which will be built by West Mercia in partnership with Lovell, will see two of the most eco-friendly affordable properties in Birmingham built as prototypes. The homes will achieve the government’s highest environmental rating for new developments, reaching Level 6 of the Code for Sustainable Homes (CSH).


The zero carbon homes will save energy thanks to features such as photovoltaic panels, rainwater harvesting systems and mechanical ventilation with heat recovery systems which work by recycling ‘wasted’ heat from kitchen and bathroom areas. The remaining properties will also have energy efficient, carbon saving features such as high-performance gas boilers with weather load compensators and solar thermal water heating panels. Two of these will reach CSH Level 4 and the remaining 44 will reach CSH Level 3.

Work will start on the properties this month with completion expected in June 2011 – five years before the government has pledged to see all new build homes reach level 6. The homes will be managed by Harden Housing Association, part of the West Mercia Housing Group, and the association will work closely with tenants to monitor the performance of these new homes and use this knowledge for future developments.

The development, which will be built on the 1.1 hectare site in Northfield, sold by Birmingham City Council, will include 28 homes for affordable rent and 20 homes for shared ownership on a part-rent, part-buy basis.

Nick Edge, development project manager at West Mercia Housing Group, said: “We are delighted to have reached this key stage and are keen to now start on site. This has always been an ambitious project, and it is only due to the patience of residents and our partnership with the council and the Homes and Communities Agency, that it has been possible.

“Since we started on phase one, eco standards have changed significantly and it is fantastic that we’ve been able to incorporate zero carbon houses as part of this final phase and build the best affordable eco-homes in the city five years ahead of the government target.”

Over the lifetime of the project, a total of 142 outdated council homes, in the shadow of the former Rover factory at Longbridge, will have been demolished and replaced with 172 new, high quality properties.

Lovell regional director David Gough added: “This development will help answer the need for high-quality, energy-efficient affordable homes, providing properties for rent as well as shared ownership homes which will help local people on to the housing ladder. We are delighted to be working in partnership with West Mercia Housing Group to deliver this scheme.”

The development is part funded by the Homes and Communities Agency.



Rating:  1 (1)  Add feedback ...

 Negative Review of this story
 Mark  13 May 2010, 11:25 AM 
 
Its all rubbish
I have been with Harden for 2 years and experienced nothing but problems from day one.

Harden claim high-quality, energy-efficient affordable homes. I moved into a newly built apartment and so far……

1. My bedroom windows were leaking and several people came out to inspect them and said they needed replacing. I reported it several times...to save money and hide the mould they put sealant around the frame and larger facer boards. Harden sent out nine people before finally changing the window. The mould was affecting my son's health and he was very chesty. 8 months it took to sort.

2. A leak occurred through my ceiling where a bucket of water fell through in the space of 40 minutes. Although someone came out that night - the cause was poor building and holes in the damp proof - which was probably what caused the bedroom window to leak.

3. The windows in hall had no ventilation holes - and were also leaking - causing mould and fur to grow. Their answer was to keep painting over the damp walls - which would not dry (obviously as it was damp) and hoover up the fur. Again it took more than 6 months for them to put a vent in the window to resolve the problem.

4. They gave tenants in the higher apartments permission to have wooden flooring. In an apartment this is not a good idea – especially when they have 3 children in them. I could hear they banging and stomping at all hours. Hardens answer was for 2 years monitor it and call the council to report it every time they made a noise. The council came out and said the noise was very bad and recorded banging. Harden sent out solicitors letters telling the resident to lift the wooden flooring and put carpets down – but this was not done – it took 2 years of banging and sleepless night to finally get them to remove the wooden floor. I had to pay for accommodation elsewhere and Harden would not help with the costs.

5. My toilet is leaking and their handbook states that it is there responsibility to sort – but they are refusing to sort it.

Harden are using cheap parts and labour to build apartments as cheaply as possible and when things go wrong it costs the tenant more as they simply put the service charges up to cover the call out charges.

 

   
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