Friday, 16 August 2013

Design for Future Climate - PassivOffice at Devonshire Gate


Gale & Snowden has been involved over the last 2 years in a very exciting project in Devon to design a new build office development built to Passivhaus Certified standards. The project has received funding from the Technology Strategy Board for the team to analyse predicted future weather and create design strategies so that the development is ready for a changing climate. 

The team has been able to come up with a series of future climate change adaptation strategies, some of which can be introduced at the beginning of the project, others can be included in the future as part of an ongoing adaptation strategy for example in an ongoing maintenance cycle.  The study has shown that it is possible, by employing sound building physics and being aware of the extent of future climate change and how this will affect the building and its users, to design solutions into the project so that the building can perform well into the future without the need for costly remedial works such as air conditioning and that this can be achieved at no or limited costs to the project.

As part of the dissemination process we are pleased to post our final design for future climate research report with this blog entry. The dissemination process will be an ongoing one and we would welcome comments and feedback on the work we have done and perhaps collaboration with future projects.



Wednesday, 14 August 2013

Gale & Snowden’s Passivhaus by the sea in North Devon, nears completion.


The all-glass, west-facing, sea-facing façade and timber cladding are now installed. Panoramic sea views and cool evening sea breezes await our clients when they move in this autumn.


Tuesday, 6 August 2013

Gale & Snowden presents Building Biology initiative at AECB conference


Building Biology UK

Gale & Snowden Architects presented their Building Biology initiative at the AECB conference on 12th July 2013. The following is the text that introduced the workshop at the AECB conference, followed by a copy of the presentation. If you would like to find out more about this initiative or are interested in Building Biology or healthy building please contact us on info@ecodesign.co.uk.

An introduction to Building Biology and Ecology – Healthy by Design
Presented by David Gale, Director Gale & Snowden Architects
"The workshop I am proposing to lead at the AECB conference 2013 will be primarily an introduction to the key concepts and principles of Building Biology & Ecology, as I understand them.
I originally trained as a Biologist, attending an Applied Biological Science degree, but for some reason ended up becoming an Architect. I set up Gale & Snowden Architects over 20 years ago because basically I didn’t like the way architecture was being practiced – creating environments that people didn’t necessarily want, highly polluting, resource depleting and particularly unhealthy on many levels. I also believed in my naivety that we could combat climate change............ above all I wanted to investigate and design systems that combined biology and architecture to produce healthy environments, where humans are intentionally designed as participants in nature – actively co-evolving the whole system – people becoming  part of a designed self perpetuating ecosystem – some people call this approach Regenerative Design.
The workshop I am proposing will be a combination of a summary of a building biology practitioner's course and what we have been up to at Gale & Snowden over the last 20 odd years."

David's presentation is available to download here.



Friday, 5 July 2013

Gale & Snowden present at the 2013 Green Cornwall Show

Gale & Snowden were invited by Cornwall County Council and The Cornwall Sustainable Building Trust to run a seminar as part of the Green Cornwall Show which took place on Thursday 27th and Friday 28th June 2013.  The event was held at Heartlands, Pool near Redruth.

The title of the seminar that David Gale presented at the event was 'Building Biology - Healthy Buildings'.

Building Biology is defined as the study of the holistic interrelationships between humans and their living environment.

The movement was founded in Germany by a group of professionals in the 1960s from a variety of disciplines concerned about the inability of post war housing to support health and ecology.  It has grown to other countries and now is a recognised authority on healthy buildings.

David started his career as a Biologist, studying Applied Biological Studies at Bristol, then continued his studies to become an Architect.  He has always been interested in how our living environment effects and influences us and from Gale & Snowden's inception over 20 years ago, we have attempted to put into practice many principles embodying a healthy building approach to all our work.

The presentation was an introduction to Building Biology, aimed at the general public.  The talk reviewed the key concepts that underpin Building Biology and then explained the four interrelating elements that Building Biology considers:  Air Quality; Water Quality; Materials; and Energy (Electromagnetic Radiation).  The talk also presented a number of Gale & Snowden built projects as case study examples.

There are many aspects about our build environment that we should be concerned with when it comes to our health and the health of our ecology.  Often people are unaware that their built environment can be detrimental to their health.

"We shape our buildings, and afterwards our buildings shape us" (Winston Churchill).

So the question is - How is your home or workplace shaping you?  You can find out and then choose to make things better.

The 'Building Biology - Healthy Buildings' presentation is available to look at below.

If you are interested in finding out more about healthy buildings please visit our webpage, and we would be happy to hear from you - please email us.




Gale & Snowden Passivhaus developments for Exeter City Council receive enthusiastic support

Two developments of Passivhaus council housing by Gale & Snowden Architects for Exeter City Council have been praised by Exeter Civic Society - an influential and respected local voice which is consulted on new developments within the city, and aims to promote high standards of planning and architecture in Exeter.

The following response was received during the planning consultation period:

"We are very pleased to let you know of our enthusiastic support for the design of these new council houses.  We do think it is a credit to the City Council to be proposing buildings; and with all credit to the architects Gale & Snowden; at long last for the 21st century.  As you know, we look at a lot of applications; many from large developers; which we consider are; if anything; only paying lip service to present and future needs, whilst in practice simply reproducing the past.

The Passivhaus principles are clearly an excellent framework and without going into detail we would highlight the central quality that '...allows units to be designed without a conventional heating system'.

We look forward to seeing the finished units, expecting the colour treatment to add to the gaiety of the city.

This is courageous and forward looking, and we wish we could see much more of it."


Enhancing our environment - conceptual elevation of new Exeter City Council Housing with integrated landscaping

Reinvention of the city terrace - conceptual visualisation  

No fuss and low cost - intelligent low energy, affordable housing achieved by simple design and good solar orientation





Wednesday, 27 March 2013

Sustainable by Design - G&S at Ecobuild 2013

Further to our post below, here is David Gale's presentation from the Sustainable by Design seminar stream at Ecobuild 2013.






Monday, 18 March 2013

G&S present at two seminar streams at Ecobuild 2013


Gale & Snowden Architects and Engineers were guest speakers for two events at Ecobuild 2013 in London Excel Centre on Thursday, March 7th 2013. 

Both talks were held at the same time, one at the Passivhaus seminar stream presented by Tomas Gartner and the other at the Sustainable by Design seminar stream presented by David Gale.  Both talks were well received, generating much interest from the audience at Ecobuild.




Both talks showcased the work the practice has been undertaking over the last couple of years applying Climate Ready Design to various live new build  projects including an Extra Care facility for the elderly including for Dementia care, a new public swimming pool and leisure facility and an office development.  These projects have benefitted from Technology Strategy Board funding under the Design 4 Future Climate programme. 

Gale & Snowden Architects and Engineers provide a design service for modelling buildings using future weather data into 2080 and providing cost effective climate change adaption strategies for new and existing buildings to ensure buildings are future climate ready.

Climate ready strategies include maintaining thermal comfort into the future without the need for energy intensive cooling systems, robustness of building envelope and systems and management of water to meet future climate challenges.

For more information please visit our Climate Ready page on our website.

Friday, 22 February 2013

Milestone day at Oyster Falls Passivhaus

As the winter sun shone and perfect waves rolled in, Gale & Snowden were on-site at Oyster Falls along with Point 6 Projects' Project Manager, the structural engineer, and the client on this milestone day to see the steel frame erected.

As the line of columns along the west facade (which will ultimately be clad in full-height, high-performance triple glazing) enclosed the open-plan, lower ground floor space, for the first time in the course of the build everyone was able to see the living area at Oyster Falls and its panoramic view over Croyde Bay, Lundy and the Atlantic Ocean take shape.

This groundbreaking Passivhaus is due for completion later in 2013.  Keep an eye on this blog for more progress photographs.


The steels enclose the lower ground floor living area

Looking north west over Croyde Bay from the upper ground floor level

Looking south west from the lower ground floor study

Tuesday, 19 February 2013

Exeter City Council Own Build Affordable Housing Public Consultation

A Public Consultation was held at St. Michael's School, Exeter on Monday 11th February.  The consultation schemes included Anthony Road, Hamlin Gardens, Bovemoor's Lane and Thornpark Rise sites for a total of 26 affordable houses for rent.  The houses are to be arranged in terraces and designed to meet the Passivhaus Standard.

Gale & Snowden Architects attended the event with Exeter City Council to meet with local residents, explain the schemes and answer any questions raised.  The feedback gathered will be used to inform the design of the schemes and full planning applications are expected to be submitted later this spring.





Tuesday, 6 November 2012

First affordable multi-residential buildings in UK to receive ‘Passive House Certification’

18 flats at Knights Place, designed by Gale & Snowden Architects Ltd., have officially received 'Passive House Certification' by the Passivhaus Institut in Germany.  The affordable housing scheme in Exeter consists of two, three-storey blocks of flats and was completed in 2011.  Knights Place together with Rowan House, which also received Passive House Certification earlier this year, are the first affordable multi-residential buildings to achieve Passive House Certification in the UK.

These developments provide quality, affordable accommodation that is both comfortable and healthy to live in.  The low energy standard allows for low running costs for the tenants which aids in defeating fuel poverty.

The Client, Structural and Civil Engineers were Exeter City Council and the Architects, Passivhaus Certified Designers, Building Services Engineers and Landscape Architects were Gale & Snowden Architects Ltd.

These developments are currently being extensively monitored for two years through the Technology Strategy Board (TSB) Building Evaluation Programme (BPE), the results of which will be regularly uploaded to our blog and published.







Good Practice Sustainable National Guide features Gale & Snowden Architects' building on the front cover.

The Town and Country 'Good Practice Guidance: Sustainable Design and Construction' leaflet produced by the TCPA dated August 2012 has featured Gale & Snowden Architects' designs for Upton in Nottingham.

'Upon, an examplar development with houses built to high levels of sustainability.  The buildings pictured were designed by Gale & Snowden Architects Ltd., who also acted as ecological design consultants for the site'.



The guide is intended to offer good practice guidance at a national level to Clients and the Construction Industry on Sustainable Design and Construction.  

The Upton project was a development Gale & Snowden designed several years ago, however due to not being involved in the detailed design or the on-site works, we do not know how sustainable the buildings were actually built or what performance standards have been met.

There is a growing awareness that many developments that are designed to meet low energy and/or ecological standards often do not meet the standards due to commercial pressures and a lack of joined up thinking during the construction process - see 'Delivering a low-energy building: Making quality commonplace' October 2012 by Bruce Totfield.

Gale & Snowden advocate the Passivhaus Standard for low energy buildings because it provides a design methodology that requires a quality team approach to construction.


Tuesday, 2 October 2012

Insulating a cob cottage 2 monitoring


Following on from the blog post last year (insulating a cob cottage 1) the second year of environmental monitoring of Jason's cob cottage is now well underway.  

The external render system Unilit 20 has now been applied to the cob walls at varying depths between 40-80 mm complete with a through coloured final render finish.  Floors have been dug out, insulated and relaid, and internal lime plastering is now complete.




The SPAB study has now decided to continue the monitoring throughout the rest of year in addition to the second winter monitoring.  This will help inform how the cob wall is performing during the summer periods as well as winter.  



Dynamic flux, temperature, humidity & CO2 monitoring












Tuesday, 4 September 2012

Air quality monitoring proves Passivhaus is not all hot air


We are pleased to say that the monitoring data is now live on the BSRIA website – all the sensors are now working and streaming data with the exception of the solar flow meter which is still being tweaked.   

We can now see the following live:
  • Air Quality - C02 levels in the bedroom and living room
  • Temperature and RH levels in all main rooms
  • External temperature and RH levels
  • KWh sub meter data on all electrical circuits – lighting, small power, MVHR, hot water, etc
  • Water flow data
  • The amount of solar energy being received by the solar panels
Below is an early snapshot of C02 levels in parts per million (ppm)  over a 24 hour period in a bedroom at 3 Rowan House taken on the 27/06/2012.  External air C02 levels are typically between 300 - 400 ppm  In the UK levels between 800-1000 ppm in the internal environment are considered an indicator of good air quality.   It can be seen levels are below 600 ppm which is well within this limit.




We will be monitoring over a 2 year period so watch this space for further details as we begin to analyse this data in more detail.

Thursday, 30 August 2012

Passivhaus Certification for Rowan House!

Rowan House is now officially certified as a "quality approved Passivhaus".  Passivhaus (or Passive House) is the world's leading standard for energy-efficient construction.  To achieve Passivhaus certification, a project must undergo a stringent quality control process that ensures the building will perform as designed.

Completed and occupied since 2010, Rowan House is among the first multi-residential developments in the UK to achieve this standard.  The building is currently being monitored under the Technology Strategy Board's 'Performance Evaluation Programme'.








The plaque to be installed at Rowan House


Wednesday, 29 August 2012

PassivOffice Project: Thermal modelling update

Gale & Snowden's thermal modelling work carried out under the TSB's Design For Future Climate (D4FC) programme confirms that:  Highly insulated, very air tight buildings like passive houses are able to maintain comfortable summer conditions without active cooling.  Due to their increased thermal lag, they have the ability to keep warm or cool for a longer period of time.  Because of this, night cooling or subsoil heat exchangers appear especially successful in passive houses.

For more information, please see the full report below:


Thursday, 16 August 2012

Knights Place press article

Following on from its success at the Michelmore's Commercial Property Awards where it scooped the "Eco-building of the Year" award, Knights Place has been profiled in an article in the Express & Echo / Western Morning News today.

Read the full article including comments from Architect Tomas Gartner here.





Visit the Knights Place project on our website here.

Tuesday, 7 August 2012

Design for future weather and Passivhaus presentation to RICS conference in Exeter

At the RICS conference held in Exeter on July 04, David presented a range of Gale & Snowden projects including ongoing research for Devonshire Gate Passivoffice and Exeter City Council's Passivpool.  By adopting passive design principles, buildings can be designed to be both very energy efficient and thermally comfortable even into future weather scenarios.




David's RICS presentation can be viewed below.  Watch this blog for more information on our ongoing research work with the Technology Strategy Board (TSB).

Monday, 16 July 2012

Environmental Performance Monitoring at Rowan House Passivhaus Building


We have finished installing all of the sensors and monitoring equipment at Rowan House and finished the air permeability testing and MVHR balance checks.   Monitoring is now underway.  We will be looking forward to receiving some objective data to see how these flats are performing.  As with Knights Place (see Knights Place blog below) the aim of this study is to monitor the following:


  • Air quality over 2 winters and 2 summers via CO2 sensors in the bedroom and living room
  • Air temperature and humidity monitoring over the 2 year period
  • Energy consumption of all the electrical sub circuits - cooking, ventilation, small power, lights etc
  • Solar hot water panel energy monitoring
  • Air permeability re-tests in the first year and second year after handover
  • Mechanical ventilation with heat recovery (MVHR) monitoring - testing air volumes over time, power efficiency of the unit in use, heat recovery efficiency during use
  • Infrared surveys and fabric dynamic heat flux tests
  • Occupant surveys and BUS questionnaires
  • EMF Studies to test the low EMF design
  • Daylight Studies


As results come in we will post them on our blog - keep an eye out, it should be interesting.

Getting prepared to fix pyranometer
Pyranometer fixed to roof
Wiring of Solar Monitor
Solar energy and flow monitor
MVHR air duct logger
Logger installed in air duct














MVHR air balance check
Tom smoke testing the air tightness
Tenants Smart metering









Thursday, 21 June 2012

Gale & Snowden wins Eco Building of the Year Award 2012

At last night's prestigious Michelmore's Commercial Property Awards ceremony, Gale & Snowden Architects were presented with the best Eco Building of the Year Award by the guest speaker Michael Portillo, for Knights Place Passivhaus affordable housing development.

The awards ceremony was held at the new Forum building on the Exeter University campus site.

David Gale, in the acceptance speech, thanked Exeter City Council and in particularly Emma Osmundsen for their vision to support an innovative scheme that would help to defeat fuel poverty and at the same time help mitigate climate change.

Knights Place is amongst the largest Passivhaus developments in this country to date. The development is in the heart of Exeter and built for the people of Exeter. This exemplar low energy scheme will raise the standards of building in the region and beyond and also raise people’s expectations of what is possible from our built environment.








For more information on the award-winning Passivhaus development at Knights Place, please visit the project profile on Gale & Snowden's website here.

Thursday, 14 June 2012

Design for Future Climate competition showcase event features three Gale & Snowden projects

The Technology Strategy Board (TSB) held their Design for Future Climate competition showcase event this week at the Building Centre in London.

The TSB booklet produced for the event features three Gale & Snowden climate change adaptation projects: a new build extra Passivhaus care facility for the elderly including high level of dememtia care, known as 'St Loyes Extra Care 4 Exeter'; a new Passivhaus public swimming pool design for Exeter, known as 'Swim 4 Exeter'; and a new build Passivhaus office development at Tiverton, known as 'Passivhaus @ Devonshire Gate'.  The articles on these three projects, featured in the TSB booklet can be read below.

Our PassivOffice at Devonshire Gate project was featured as one of the key project presentations of the Day.  Architect Tomas Gartner presented the PassivOffice project on behalf of Gale & Snowden and was part of the Q&A panel session following the presentation.  Gale & Snowden's presentation can be viewed below.

The RIBA will be publishing shortly a book written by Bill Gething of design for future climate.  Gale & Snowden's TSB Extra Care 4 Exeter project will be featured in the book.  We will let you know when the book is on sale.