The changes to the Building Regulations tie Parts L
and F closer together. This is because ventilation is
rapidly becoming the greatest source of heat loss in new
dwellings as the standard of insulation continues to improve.
The revised Part L places a great emphasis on making
buildings as airtight as possible and, from April, air pressure
leakage testing will become a mandatory requirement
for all constructions, including dwellings, to measure air
permeability and show any unacceptable leakage. This in
turn places a greater importance on controlled, purpose provided
ventilation as opposed to infiltration.
Pressure testing will cost around £4-500 per property,
but can potentially be avoided for self-builders if it can be
demonstrated that, during that 12-month period, a dwelling
of the same type constructed by the same builder has
been pressure tested and achieved the required design air
permeability, or more likely, by using a value of 15m3/(h.m2)
when calculating the Dwelling Carbon Emissions Rate.
The effect of using this worst-case value would then
have to be compensated for by improving standards of
energy efficiency elsewhere in the dwelling. Options for
compensating include improving the elemental U-values
in floors, walls, roof and windows, a better boiler SEDBUK
rating or the inclusion of renewables such as solar panels,
a heat pump and photovoltaic ventilation, either through
natural means (such as opening windows to each room) or
where there are no windows, a mechanical fan.
You might also wish to provide extraction above the kitchen
hob. This can be incorporated into a whole-house system
but it is generally considered best to keep this separate
due to the high levels of grease and moisture produced in
kitchens. Kitchen extractors can be ducted to the outside, or
can filter out cooking smells and return the cleaned air back
into the kitchen.
When considering ventilation it is important to remember
that the roof structure and any voids beneath suspended
floors and ceilings need to be ventilated under Part C of the
Building Regs and under Part J ventilation is required for
fires and stoves.