Whatgreenhome.com provides you with independent reviews of eco-friendly homes for sale at more than 80 developments in 26 countries worldwide, including the UK. To find your eco-home look to the right and click on one of the featured eco-homes, or choose a region that will reveal a map showing all the developments we have profiled, or enter the town where you are looking to buy in the search box. You can receive more information, including free inspection visits in many cases, by clicking on the developer’s contact details within an eco-home’s profile and then completing the pop-up form.
buying an eco-friendly home starts with whatgreenhome.com
mapping the eco-world
We have added maps to help you access the eco-properties reviewed on whatgreenhome.com even more quickly and easily. To view the profiles of more than 75 developments across 25 countries on six continents, including the UK, simply click on the map or continent names listed in the right hand column. Once you have done this click on the green pin head of your choosing to bring up a brief introduction to the eco-homes for sale. A further click on the More information... link will take you to the full profile on whatgreenhome.com, where, if you wish, you can complete a pop-up form to have the development details sent to you, or have someone contact you at a time that’s convenient for you.
Introducing the maps continues several new initiatives we have implemented. We have formed an affiliation with green energy uk to give you the opportunity to quickly and easily switch your home or business electricity supply to 100 per cent renewable and green electricity. green energy uk provides cleaner, greener electricity and does not buy or sell any brown energy nor buy or sell any energy created by biomass from food crops. Green energy uk has two tariffs to choose from a deep green from renewables and a pale green predominantly from green CHP sources.
Our affiliation with green energy uk complements the partnership we have formed with eco-friendly online retailer biggreensmile.com to provide a comprehensive range of environmental, ethical and recycled products that will help you to save water, energy and money, and to reduce you carbon footprint. The initiatives with both companies, we believe, provide you with sustainable and viable alternatives to conventional goods and services. To find out more, simply click on the logos above.
The Eco-House Manual: How to carry out environmentally friendly improvements to your home
Nigel Griffiths
joined up eco-thinking
PM Gordon Brown announced on 3 October the creation of a new Government Department for Energy and Climate Change (DECC). Ed Miliband has been appointed the department’s Secretary of State, which sees him take over policy areas previous led by John Hutton at the Department for Business, Enterprise and Regulatory Reform (BERR), who oversaw energy, and Hilary Benn at the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) under whose remit fell climate change.
Mr Miliband said: “The new department reflects the fact that energy policy and climate change are directly linked. My job is to make sure our policy on climate change is fair for ordinary families and our policy on energy is sustainable for future generations. We will do all we can to ensure affordable fuel bills for people, put Britain at the forefront of creating green jobs and play our part in ensuring every country meets the climate change challenge.”
Reaction to the formation of the new department has been broadly well received. Stephen Hale, director of environmental think tank Green Alliance, said: “Hallelulah. A department of energy and climate change. Not before time. Ed Miliband’s in-tray is piled high with issues that the old structure did not resolve. The new department puts climate change where it belongs, with its own seat at the Cabinet table.”
The combining of energy and climate change departments has long been mooted. The Sustainable Development Commission, which is the Government’s independent advisors on the environment, had recommended combining energy and climate change policy under a single environment secretary in the Commission’s 2007 report on the role of regulator Ofgem.
How the new department will dovetail with the Government’s zero-carbon housing commitments, which fall under the Department for Communities and Local Government’s (DCLG) remit, has not yet been made clear. But it will no longer be Caroline Flint’s responsibility. She has left the department to be replaced as the Minister of State (Housing) by the Rt Hon Margaret Beckett MP.
One of Ms Beckett’s first challenges is to manage the Government’s eco-towns programme that is in danger of becoming a calamity. Already, several proposals have been withdrawn, leaving the government having to delay until 2009 the announcement of which sites will proceed to construction.
Now, rumours abound that draft guidance, written by external consultants for the DCLG, suggests that the eco-town homes should not be measured against the Government’s own Code for Sustainable Homes (CSH), but instead should be gauged against a European model of energy output per square metre.
What does that say about the Government having faith in its own Code? And how can
it ask housebuilders to adhere to a Code that it itself may not enforce at its own
‘sponsored’ eco-towns? By the way, more than 18 months since the
Government introduced the CSH, it has yet to publish its definition of zero-carbon
a key premise of the Code. Ms Beckett has much work to do indeed.
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have your say
eco-homes from £35,000
The economic downturn is impacting on all sectors but the housing market in the UK and overseas
is one of the worst affected. But there are some very well priced properties for sale out there that have the added
benefit of not costing the earth - literally - because they are sustainably built with eco-friendly features.
Here’s several on the market priced from only £35,000.
more... >
Brighton’s green door opens
One Brighton, New England Quarter in Brighton, on England’s south coast, has thrown open
its show apartment door. The UK’s most sustainable development under construction it’s true zero
carbon, has an EcoHomes ‘Excellent’
rating, and is one of only two developments in the UK to have achieved five green ticks on this site it is the
flagship project of a partnership between developer BioRegional Quintain and housebuilder Crest Nicholson. Prices
start from £132,000 for a studio apartment.
more... >
a green pioneer
Energy prices concern us all as they impact on how much we pay for our gas and electricity -
even in hot Mediterranean countries where cooling and not heating is generally required. At award-winning AlmaVerde
Spa & Village, located on the western Algarve, a revolutionary cooling system, called the Coolhouse system,
obviates the need for energy (and cash) hungry air-conditioning.
more... >
rain, rain come again
Park Farm, the HQ for Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall and his River Cottage team, has undergone a
revamp. Located on the Dorset/Devon borders, Park Farm has been expanded to create an onsite cookery
school, events and educational base and dinner venue, which promote food provenance, integrity and locality. The
River Cottage eco-ethos has been used throughout the build process.
more... >
greek eco-resort kicks off
England rugby Internationals Matt Stevens and Lee Mears have bought homes at the new Halcyon Hills Luxury Spa and Eco-resort
on the Greek island of Samos. The duo, who play for Bath, recently visited the island where they were filmed for a
programme that will be aired on Real Estate TV and the Discovery Channel.
more... >
slowly does it
Taking its inspiration from the global slow movement, which originated in Italy, Slo (Simple
Living Opportunities) at South Chase, Newhall, Harlow, is the latest phase of a master planned development of
architecturally striking homes located on the Essex and Herts borders. Architects
Proctor and Matthews have conceived Slo to be a place to relax and to take time to appreciate the simple aspects of
home life.
more... >
when less is more
East West Partners, with financial partner Morgan Stanley Real Estate, who are the new owner of
eco-resort at Three Sisters Mountain Village, Alberta, Western Canada,
has announced that it intends to submit a revised Area Structure Plan to the Town of Canmore that will dramatically
reduce future development at the resort community. The move, it is believed, will enhance the local environment for
people and wildlife alike.
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