Nonsense.Its well known that highly insulated buildings heat up due to overheating.
Please read more thoroughly. And at least understand what you do read.

Nonsense.Its well known that highly insulated buildings heat up due to overheating.
The grass hardly grows in this weather so no energy used there to cut it.
MBK has shown you a report that says flats overheat. It's more to do with the idiosyncrasies of the structure and poor ventilation.But why. What is the science behind it.
MBK has shown you a report that says flats overheat. It's more to do with the idiosyncrasies of the structure and poor ventilation.
Largely irrelevant to regular housing. Inadequately insulated/ventilated lofties are the worst culprits in that respect.
- human occupants.
- Infrastructure inside the home
- Solar gain on windows.
Maybe it could be from the fact that you have to open doors to go in and out which lets the heat in and it stays there or opening windows and also sunlight through windows.
What sensible factors has MBK raised?But my first thought is that some of the other factors MBK raised in his other reply seem sensible
What sensible factors has MBK raised?
Only if it is poorly ventilated and in extremes - i.e. all windows would need to be closed, no shading on the windows, a lot of glazing on the South side, doors closed throughout the whole day, poor glazing i.e. no Solar or low E glass etc, no trickles.This is only my first instinctive thought, and it takes me ages to think through things like this. But he seems to be saying that if you have a highly insulated building, then any heat generated inside the structure, by sources such as human activity, solar gain, and electrical appliances, will take a lot longer to dissipate because of the insulation all around the house.
Only if it is poorly ventilated and in extremes

We call them “dicks on sticks”A plank on a plank![]()
Idiosyncrasies aside - mitigating heat gain is far easier when a house is robustly insulated than when it is not. There is zero benefit regards anything thermal, to not insulating a house.I am thinking of the situation we occasionally get when you get a run of very hot days with very still nights. Even if you open all the windows at night, there is almost no heat loss. But as you pointed out earlier, the insulation means that the house would not have got as hot in the first place. Anyway, this is all far too complex for me and there are too many unknowns.
Yes but remember the likes of noseall deliberately grab the wrong end of the stick just to start arguing.