Drivers for retrofit: a sociocultural approach to houses and inhabitants
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Drivers for retrofit : a sociocultural approach to houses and inhabitants. / Tjørring, Lise; Gausset, Quentin.
In: Building Research and Information, Vol. 47, No. 4, 2019, p. 394-403.Research output: Contribution to journal › Journal article › Research › peer-review
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Drivers for retrofit
T2 - a sociocultural approach to houses and inhabitants
AU - Tjørring, Lise
AU - Gausset, Quentin
PY - 2019
Y1 - 2019
N2 - Private households constitute approximately 30% of the total energy consumption in Denmark. The greatest potential for reducing energy consumption in private households is through retrofits of existing houses. One of the most common ways to promote retrofits is the act of sending an energy advisor to visit homeowners in order to explain the technological and economic advantages that arise from undertaking a retrofit. However, little is known about how homeowners make sense of retrofits. Based on an extensive anthropological fieldwork study of 12 Danish homeowners who had received energy advice, retrofits were investigated from the perspective of the everyday life of homeowners. Three social dimensions that played an important role when the people in the study discussed house renovation were identified and discussed: houses as part of homeowners’ life cycles and personal events; houses as frameworks for social relations; and houses as markers of social values and status. These results indicate a need to develop new strategies to promote retrofits more effectively, which focus less on the techno-economic aspects and more on the social dimensions.
AB - Private households constitute approximately 30% of the total energy consumption in Denmark. The greatest potential for reducing energy consumption in private households is through retrofits of existing houses. One of the most common ways to promote retrofits is the act of sending an energy advisor to visit homeowners in order to explain the technological and economic advantages that arise from undertaking a retrofit. However, little is known about how homeowners make sense of retrofits. Based on an extensive anthropological fieldwork study of 12 Danish homeowners who had received energy advice, retrofits were investigated from the perspective of the everyday life of homeowners. Three social dimensions that played an important role when the people in the study discussed house renovation were identified and discussed: houses as part of homeowners’ life cycles and personal events; houses as frameworks for social relations; and houses as markers of social values and status. These results indicate a need to develop new strategies to promote retrofits more effectively, which focus less on the techno-economic aspects and more on the social dimensions.
U2 - 10.1080/09613218.2018.1423722
DO - 10.1080/09613218.2018.1423722
M3 - Journal article
VL - 47
SP - 394
EP - 403
JO - Building Research and Information
JF - Building Research and Information
SN - 0961-3218
IS - 4
ER -
ID: 189370837