Free Heat: How Buildings Can Warm Themselves Using Sunlight, Mass & Earth: 8 (UK Building Regulations) - Softcover

Book 8 of 8: UK Building Regulations

Oldham, David G.

 
9781918786750: Free Heat: How Buildings Can Warm Themselves Using Sunlight, Mass & Earth: 8 (UK Building Regulations)

Synopsis

Your heating bills arrive like clockwork, each one a little higher than the last. You watch the news — energy markets in chaos, supply chains strained, climate targets missed. And somewhere in the back of your mind, a question forms: surely there must be a better way?

There is. It's been here all along.

This book reveals how to heat your home using nothing but sunlight, earth and intelligent design. No boilers. No fuel deliveries. No meter spinning faster every winter. Just the quiet, reliable warmth that comes from working with nature rather than fighting against it.

Passive heating isn't new technology — it's ancient wisdom, refined by modern building science and adapted for the maritime climates of the UK and northern France. From the sun-catching orientation of a farmhouse window to the thermal mass of a stone wall that releases warmth long after sunset, these principles have kept people comfortable for centuries. This book brings them together in one comprehensive, accessible guide.

You'll learn every major passive heating strategy from first principles. No engineering degree required — just clear explanations that build your understanding step by step. Solar gain, thermal mass, superinsulation, earth sheltering, Trombe walls, sunspaces, heat recovery: each technique is examined honestly, with its genuine benefits and real limitations laid bare. Because in building, as in life, the mistakes you avoid matter as much as the choices you make.

What sets this guide apart is its climate-specific focus. Generic advice written for continental climates or sun-drenched latitudes won't serve you in Manchester or Normandy, where grey skies and driving rain are facts of life. Here you'll find guidance tailored to temperate maritime conditions — practical strategies that actually work when the sun is scarce and the wind is not.

The book takes you room by room through a real home, showing how theory translates into design decisions. You'll see how orientation, glazing, mass and insulation interact — and how to balance them for your specific site and circumstances. Whether you're planning a new build, tackling a deep renovation, or simply trying to understand why your Victorian terrace loses heat so fast, you'll find answers here.

This is not a book of grand promises or evangelical enthusiasm. It's an honest assessment of what passive heating can achieve — and where conventional systems still have their place. You'll finish it equipped to make informed decisions, ask the right questions of architects and builders, and avoid the costly errors that plague so many well-intentioned projects.

Energy independence isn't a fantasy. It's a design choice. And in a world of volatile prices, uncertain supply and a climate demanding urgent action, that choice has never mattered more.

The sun rises every morning. The earth holds its warmth. The only question is whether your home is designed to use them.

This book shows you how.

"synopsis" may belong to another edition of this title.