Small is Beautiful: U.S. House Size, Resource Use, and the Environment

As house size increases, resource use in buildings goes up, more land is occupied, increased impermeable surface results in more storm-water runoff, construction costs rise, and energy consumption increases. In new, single-family houses constructed in the United States, living area per family member has increased by a factor of 3 since the 1950s. In comparing the energy performance of compact (small) and large single-family houses, we find that a small house built to only moderate energy-performance standards uses substantially less energy for heating and cooling than a large house built to very high energy-performance standards.

Context and quantification

About the policy

Area

Climate Action

Instrument

Incentives, Standards

Intervention

Housing Downsizing

Cost

None

Funding

None

Institutional arrangement

None

Impacts

Stakeholders involved

Building associations, Urban planners

Stakeholders impacted

Households, Local communities

Wellbeing

Housing, Life Satisfaction

Justice consideration

Distributional

Metadata

Lead author nameAlex Wilson
Lead author genderMale
Lead author institutionBuildingGreen
Lead author institution locationVermont, USA
Peer reviewed?true
Grey literature?false
Type of paperResearch article
Volume9(1-2)
Publication year2005
URL / DOIhttp://mitpress.mit.edu/jie
Sufficiency mentioned?true