Duncan Baker-Brown, architect of the Ογ½ΆΦ±²₯’s Waste House, Britain’s first house made almost entirely of thrown-away materials, is calling on politicians to introduce an award system that encourages green retrofit projects to reduce CO2 emissions and combat climate change.
Baker-Brown, Senior Lecturer at the university’s School of Art Design & Media, wants a VAT ‘level playing field’ to encourage the kind of recycling and reuse of materials that were central to his Waste House, an award-winning building made of recycled materials including 20,000 toothbrushes, 2 tonnes of denim jeans, 4,000 DVD cases, 2,000 floppy discs, 2000 used carpet tiles to clad the facades, construction waste and surplus wood and bricks.
The House, built in the grounds of the university’s campus in Brighton, is the first permanent public building of its kind in Europe. It was built in part to prove Baker-Brown’s claim “that there is no such thing and waste, just stuff in the wrong place” and to highlight that “the construction industry discards 20 per cent of everything it uses, the equivalent of scrapping one in five houses built”.