Market Leads & Opportunities
Approval for Bristol eco-housing scheme
The go-ahead has been given for an affordable eco-housing development, to be built on disused council-owned garage plots in Bristol.Bristol City Council’s development control committee approved the plans for a row of nine affordable one bedroom, two storey homes on Bell Close in Horfield. Designed by design practice BDP and to be brought forward by Etopia, the homes have been commissioned and will be funded by the council.Cllr Tom Renhard, cabinet member for housing delivery and homes at Bristol City Council, said: “We’re committed to delivering 1,000 new affordable homes each year by 2024 to help meet the need for high-quality, sustainable new homes in Bristol.”He added: “The Gap House concept will revitalise a disused garage plot and make sure that council land is best used to create value for Bristol citizens, delivering much needed affordable homes whilst tackling the climate and ecological emergencies. If the project is a success, then we will look to identify further sites for Gap Houses in the future.”BDP originally showcased its Gap House concept design at Bristol Housing Festival in 2018, as a proposed way of helping to meet the city’s need for housing and revitalising neighbourhoods.The homes will be cost-effective, eco-friendly and largely factory-built using modern methods of construction (MMC).Each home will be highly insulated with low energy lighting to support minimal heating requirements and will use renewable energy generated by solar PV panels and air source heat pumps, resulting in low environmental impact and running costs.The homes will include an open-plan kitchen-living area and a bathroom on the ground floor, with a bedroom and storage on the first floor.Martin Jones, landscape architect director in BDP’s Bristol studio, said: “Our Gap House concept to help meet the need for high quality, affordable and sustainable homes has been some years in the making, so we are thrilled that we will now see it come to fruition in Bristol.”There are thousands of disused and run-down garage plots up and down the country that are ripe for intelligent repurposing, so we hope that this project will pave the way for other similar schemes in the future. The Gap House provides an opportunity to revitalise neighbourhoods, promote community cohesion and help address the acute housing needs of our cities and towns.”This new concept is the latest in a series of innovations being explored by Bristol City Council and the Bristol Housing Festival to tackle the city’s housing crisis. Gap House is part of a wider research, development and innovation programme funded by Innovate UK, which looked at the potential for MMC to increase the scale and pace of the delivery of high quality, sustainable, affordable homes in the city.
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