This project will provide essential research to underpin policy enabling Australia to provide high performance urban housing within current and future economic and environmental limits.
The Lifetime Affordable Housing research project will address the following 4 research questions, designed to direct research in key themes, as described:
Existing studies indicate that, although methods exist, life cycle costing of environmental performance is in its infancy. Existing approaches will be synthesised and case-studies of standard Class 1 and 2 house designs will be developed for use in the study. For each design concept, three scenarios will be developed; baseline (5-star to current building codes); enhanced (7-star to enhanced performance parameters) and world class (approximately 9 star, approaching carbon neutral). LCA and costs data will be applied to each scenario to calculate capital, payback and lifetime costs of each, with emphasis on three key parameters; $, kgGHG and litres of water used. Thus, addressing Research Question 1 will involve synthesising existing methods and developing additional assessment methods, which will include the widest possible range of building specification variables.
Research conducted under this theme will seek to quantify the economic and environmental benefits of increased provision of affordable housing on sites within urban areas, rather than on greenfield sites at the urban periphery. Current data on brownfield and greyfield land availability will be supplemented with new research identifying appropriate locations for affordable housing based on demand factors such as land prices, sustainable travel options and the location of employment. The costs of interventions required in order to release land within the case study locations will be assessed against the economic, social and environmental benefits identified.
In addressing Research Question 3, the assessments from Themes 2 and 3 will be integrated and directions for fiscal and policy approaches developed. The analysis will identify, categorise and quantify the main financial and time costs that impact on the household over the short, medium and long term for the key case study scenarios. As such analysis will focus on the internal costs and benefits and those externalities that affect households, rather than the broader community. Relevant data will also be collected from ABS, industry and government sources and tested against the specialist knowledge of the Partner Organisations.
In the light of the integrated analyses presented in answer to the first three research questions, we will explore how particular policy instruments can be utilised to minimise the long term net cost to households and the broader community of housing developments. For each particular development scenario, derived from the case studies, the analysis will identify the cost consequences for households over the long term, the real (as opposed to perceived) trade-offs between environmentally performing housing and cost to the household, and the government policy interventions that would be required to enable households to minimise their long term housing costs.
Dissemination will be a continuous process. A communication plan will be developed in conjunction with the LAH Project Advisory Committee, while will contain the following elements: