Part L changes in detail: Air testing
Over the coming weeks we’ll be examining the upcoming changes to SAP and SBEM in more detail, which will hopefully give you a bit of a head start when these tougher regulations kick in come October 1st.
This week we are focusing on air testing – an area which we’ve already featured on this blog, so here’s recap:
For the last five years in England and Wales it has been advisable to have a test completed on a newly constructed building to measure how air tight it is. This is a feature of Part L and can make a large improvement to a SAP or SBEM calculation if a good air test is recorded.
The test itself has many names… ‘Air Leakage Tests’, ‘Air Permeability Assessments’, ‘Air Tightness Testing’… whatever you want to call it, it’s a measure of how much air is escaping or entering the building through the building fabric.
The air test itself isn’t changing with the new regulations, but there are some important areas you need to bear in mind.
Firstly, the amount of air tests which are required is being increased. Officially, around a quarter of all new dwellings need to be tested when built. Any development which is registered after the October 2010 date will need to comply with the new Part L, which means around half of new dwellings should be tested. It’s fair to say that, in reality, this figure will be lower and Building Control departments will retain their discretion on which plots and how many are tested.
Commercial developments remain the same. Any building with a floor area larger than 500 sqm must be tested – anything smaller can be tested in order to achieve a lower EPC rating, but this isn’t compulsory.
The other big change is the ‘confidence factor’. Currently, if a new dwelling isn’t tested, the SAP assessment is based on the value which a builder claims they can achieve. So if a builder has achieved an air test of 6 on a previous house, the SAP for the new house can also use the same figure.
From October, if any plots are not tested, the SAP calculation must be based on the average air test value on the site, plus two. So, if you have five new houses, have two tested, one result is 9.5 and the other result is 7.6, the three other plots will be assumed to have an air leakage figure = (9.5+7.6)/2 +2 = 10.55… the highest figure allowed is 10 which means your remaining plots will no longer comply with Part L.
A good rule to remember is that individual plots must achieve an air leakage rate better than 10, the site average must be better than 8.
And just to get some scope on this, Germany has a figure around 5, Scandinavian countries are around 3 and the Passivhaus standard would expect to reach around 0.5. Air tests are being phased into Scotland next year.
For more information on this, or to arrange for an air test, contact Energist UK for a free quote on 08458 386 387.
