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  6. Heating standards and obsolescence in post-war Britain’s homes for today and tomorrow
 
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Heating standards and obsolescence in post-war Britain’s homes for today and tomorrow

Open Access
Article
Date Issued
2024
Author(s)
ORCID link icon Palate, Savia  
Editor(s)
Jacoby, Sam
Özer, Seyithan
DOI
10.17645/up.7754
Volume
9
Issue
This article is part of the issue “Housing Norms and Standards: The Design of Everyday Life”
Abstract
In 1962, a short film by Shell-Mex and BP Limited (Companies of the Royal Dutch/Shell Group and the British Petroleum Group) was prepared for the 29th Annual Conference and Exhibition of the National Society of Clean Air in Britain to encourage British households to shift from coal domestic fires to smokeless heating appliances. One year earlier, in 1961, the most influential report on space standards in Britain was published, titled Homes for Today and Tomorrow (also known as the Parker Morris Report), which advocated for flexibility in the home through larger size homes and better heating. This article focuses on the report’s emphasis on better heating as one way to fulfil the concept of the “adaptable home,” and it introduces the discussions about heating standards during the report’s making, underlining the open domestic fire as an obsolete technology. These discussions, however, were entangled with socio-cultural endeavours and consumerist aspirations for modernisation, placing the removal of an otherwise pervasive domestic element within a broader net of forces, actors, and dilemmas involved in decision-making and planning. This article, composed as a historical acquisition, oscillates from the scale of the domestic fireplace to the housing scale, raising the issue of obsolescence in housing provision, which is still salient today.
Subjects

Adaptable home

Air pollution

Council housing

Domestic waste

Heating standards

Homes for today and t...

Parker Morris Report

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