I’m currently trying to renovate a long-neglected house that I have inherited.
It’s late Victorian (about 130 years old), a large 3-storey mid-terraced house, with a total floor area of about 1,200 ft² (about 110 m²). Other than for the pitched roof, it’s poorly insulated, with solid 9” brick external walls, single-glazed wooden-framed windows and a suspended wooden ground floor.
It currently has no heating system, so I’ve started thinking about what would be required (in ball-park terms), initially by doing some very rough ‘back of a fag packet’ calculations of the amount of heat energy required (initially just for ‘space heating’).
To do that, I’ve attempted to produce an estimate of the heat energy that would be required to maintain all of the rooms at about 22 ⁰C above outside temp, with halls/landings about 17 ⁰C above outside temp and assuming that the adjacent (terraced) properties would have inside temps around 3 ⁰C lower than in my house.
Those calculations suggest a total heat energy requirement (for space heating alone) of around 11 kW, with even the largest room (about 183 ft², 17 m², with one outside wall and a sizeable window) requiring less than 1.5 kW.
These estimates seemed surprisingly low to me, but I suppose I am not very used to seeing figures for a terraced house - all the rooms in the house concerned have at most one outside wall (albeit usually with a sizeable single-glazed window), with the other walls all being party walls or interior walls, will little or no assumed temp difference across them.
So, my question is whether the figures I’ve arrived at sound reasonably credible for this terraced house (or whether I need to re-visit my calculations for possible ‘flaws’
) ?
Kind Regards, John
It’s late Victorian (about 130 years old), a large 3-storey mid-terraced house, with a total floor area of about 1,200 ft² (about 110 m²). Other than for the pitched roof, it’s poorly insulated, with solid 9” brick external walls, single-glazed wooden-framed windows and a suspended wooden ground floor.
It currently has no heating system, so I’ve started thinking about what would be required (in ball-park terms), initially by doing some very rough ‘back of a fag packet’ calculations of the amount of heat energy required (initially just for ‘space heating’).
To do that, I’ve attempted to produce an estimate of the heat energy that would be required to maintain all of the rooms at about 22 ⁰C above outside temp, with halls/landings about 17 ⁰C above outside temp and assuming that the adjacent (terraced) properties would have inside temps around 3 ⁰C lower than in my house.
Those calculations suggest a total heat energy requirement (for space heating alone) of around 11 kW, with even the largest room (about 183 ft², 17 m², with one outside wall and a sizeable window) requiring less than 1.5 kW.
These estimates seemed surprisingly low to me, but I suppose I am not very used to seeing figures for a terraced house - all the rooms in the house concerned have at most one outside wall (albeit usually with a sizeable single-glazed window), with the other walls all being party walls or interior walls, will little or no assumed temp difference across them.
So, my question is whether the figures I’ve arrived at sound reasonably credible for this terraced house (or whether I need to re-visit my calculations for possible ‘flaws’
Kind Regards, John


