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 name | Alex Wilson |
---|---|
Lead author gender | Male |
Lead author institution | BuildingGreen |
Lead author institution location | Vermont, USA |
Peer reviewed? | true |
Grey literature? | false |
Type of paper | Research article |
Volume | 9(1-2) |
Publication year | 2005 |
URL / DOI | http://mitpress.mit.edu/jie |
Sufficiency mentioned? | true |