Smart Housing and Social Sustainability:
Learning from the Residents of Queensland’s Research
House Laurie Buys, Karen Barnett, Evonne Miller, Chanel
Bailey
abstract
One fifth of greenhouse gas emissions
in Australia are generated by the everyday activities
of households (Commonwealth of Australia 2005a). Higher
consumer awareness of the impact of housing on the environment
(Commonwealth of Australia 2003, 2005b) and of sustainable
housing alternatives (The State of Queensland 2005a) is
essential. One of the drawbacks to mainstreaming ecologically
sustainable housing designs is consumer resistance, based
on perceptions of eco- or green- housing as being less
aesthetically pleasing, and less economically attractive
for resale than traditional housing (Minnery et al. 2003).
This paper reports findings from a small social study
about the experiences of a family who lived in ‘Research
House’, Australia, for a two year period monitoring
product performance and household economies in a sustainable
house. Residents reported satisfaction and improved feelings
of safety when living in the spacious, airy and secure
home, providing feedback to enable product improvement
and assist consumer decision-making about sustainable
housing.
Keywords: sustainable housing, Smart
Housing, Research House, social sustainability, design
evaluation.
Laurie
Buys is the Director of the Centre for Social Change
Research at Queensland University of Technology Karen Barnett
is a Postdoctoral fellow at the Centre for Social Change
Research at Queensland University of Technology Evonne Miller is
a Senior Research Officer at the Centre for Social Change
Research at Queensland University of Technology Chanel Bailey was
a Research Assistant on the Research House Project.
The Australian
Journal of Emerging Technologies and Society
examines the social implications of emerging technologies,
from mobile Internet and wireless technologies to biotechnology and cybernetics.