04.09.2019, 16:20
Ground Source Heating for Cornish Social Housing Development
A new build social housing project on the family-run Mitchell Fruit Garden Farm in Cornwall will soon be extracting heat from a ground source heat pump solution.
The development of 26 houses and flats in the village of Mitchell near Newquay is being built by Newton Abbot-based EBC for local people on an affordable rent and shared ownership basis, after receiving over £1 million of funding from Homes England – the non-departmental housing accelerator that replaced the UK government’s Homes and Communities Agency last year as a principal source of funding for affordable homes.
Kensa Contracting will be installing a heat pump in each home for connection to a series of shared borehole ground loops that provide low-cost through underfloor or traditional (radiator) heating, and qualify for a a non-domestic renewable heating incentive (RHI) the government awards to Housing Associations and other social housing providers – Redruth based Coastal Housing in this instance, for a minimum period of 20 years.
Amy Jenkin, Coastline Housing’s development manager, says:
“We are happy to be working with Kensa to install ground source heating into one of our new build developments for the first time, giving our customers guaranteed access to a efficient, sustainable heating.”