Hi All
Attached are the plans for the homes that I have permission for; I plan to change the three bedroom one so that the rectangle is completed (which would allow for en-suites to the relevant bedrooms) and also to have a flat sloping roof at an angle of between 20 and 35 degrees (dependent on what the planners will allow) so that the whole roof is available for solar panels.
The structure will use SIP panels with a U value no more than 0.13, a SIP roof, triple-glazed windows (Munster Joinery seem good but I haven't obtained quotes yet) and insulated foundations. So not aiming for Passivhus on my first build but I want to try to get close-ish.
I'm looking for MVHR for a bit under 200m2 of floor area (but bear in mind the high ceilings on the first floor). I'd like comfort cooling for the hopefully hot summers to come. Water heating needs to support three showers/sinks in the en-suites, sink and bath in the bathroom and sink in the kitchen. I'm not planning underfloor heating but infra-red radiant but that is under review.
The property will have no gas and probably no grid electric, so lots of solar panels and big batteries. So the plan was to have an Ariston Nuos cylinder with built-in heat pump, immersion and 200l (or 250l) of water storage plus a 300l indirect cylinder with an immersion. So the Nuos could be used to heat the water in the second cylinder and in itself using its heat pump, but the immersions could be used if needed. But I'm also talking to Total Home about their systems (PKOM4, Joule and heat pump MVHRs) because they look interesting.
I'm working on the basis that these are holiday homes, so likely to have gaps between bookings. So the hope is that a lot of the time the batteries will be full and the solar energy can be used to just heat up the water. And I want to cater for the booking that has 6 adults, 5 of whom have showers in the morning and one has a bath. So lots of hot water needed, hence the two cylinders.
The house will also need a sewage treatment plant; I'm currently favouring the new Solido over the Vortex or the Graf though I don't know enough to justify my choice; I think they'll all do the job and in the end I just had to pick one. Would have liked to have had the choice of one of the non-electric plants but they seem to be about £2,000 more than the electric and I don't believe the savings are worth it.
Anyway, nice to be here listening to you all
Derek Mugwanya
A.02_First_Floor_Plans_and_Elevations.pdf
A.05 First Floor Plans and Elevations.pdf