Tackling the climate emergency

Traditional sandstone Glasgow tenements

We’re pleased to receive an award of £250,000 for a new sustainable housing project in Glasgow that has the potential to make a big contribution to addressing the climate emergency in Scotland.

The project, funded by the Scottish Funding Council’s Climate Emergency Collaboration Challenge, will retrofit a block of eight tenement flats in Govanhill. This will enable real-life testing of changes to specifications for the refurbishment of properties to help understand how to reduce carbon emissions from existing housing stock.

Project lead Professor of Housing Economics Ken Gibb believes there is the potential for energy savings of between 75% and 90%. “Older housing is a key source of the carbon challenge, especially our pre-1919 tenements. This demonstration project allows us to both learn about this particular form of retrofit and to assess how to scale up and provide replicable solutions across the range of Glasgow tenements.”

The project is the first outcome of the Memorandum of Understanding agreed between Glasgow City Council and the academic institutions in the city which commits universities and colleges to working with the Council to advance shared priorities and ensure academic expertise is able to inform public policy in Glasgow.

Councillor Susan Aitken is Leader of Glasgow City Council: “This project in Govanhill gives us an opportunity to create a template which has the potential to make major inroads towards our net zero target, create warmer homes, reduce fuel bills and retain our characteristic housing stock.”

“We are facing a global climate emergency and one of the major challenges is not only how we build in the future, but reducing carbon emissions from existing housing stock. Innovation plays a key part in this and will help us reach our ambitious, world-leading target to reach net-zero by 2045.” Ivan McKee MSP Minister for Trade, Investment & Innovation."

This article was first published March 2020.