Social housing temperature conditions and tenant priorities

Author:

Sansom Gemma1ORCID,Barlow Cynthia Faye1ORCID,Daniel Lyrian12ORCID,Baker Emma1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. The Australian Centre for Housing Research, Faculty of Arts, Business, Law and Economics University of Adelaide Adelaide South Australia 5005 Australia

2. UniSA Creative University of South Australia Adelaide South Australia 5000 Australia

Abstract

AbstractThe social housing sector provides housing to some of society's most vulnerable people, disproportionately housing people with disabilities and chronic health conditions, the aged and people unable to work. These groups are often more susceptible to health impacts from poor temperature conditions within their home. In this paper, we examine temperature conditions in Australian social housing, explore tenant experiences and reflect on possible remediation responses. Using a novel contact‐free delivery protocol for data collection, temperature was measured in 36 social housing dwellings over a 3‐month springtime period. Semistructured interviews were conducted with occupants to better understand their experience of (adverse) indoor temperature conditions. On average, participants spent 35 per cent of time across the study period in temperatures outside the WHO guidelines (18–24°C). Most participants perceived their homes to be cold or very cold during periods of cold weather, and many considered energy unaffordable. Building conditions, such as poor sealing around windows and doors, lack of insulation and inadequacy of space heating appliances, were of greatest concern to participants. Participants' preferences for remediation work suggest that considerable benefit could be gained from making homes more energy efficient through draft sealing and insulation.

Funder

Australian Research Council

National Health and Medical Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Sociology and Political Science

Reference58 articles.

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