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submitted 1 year ago by fouc@lemm.ee to c/unitedkingdom@feddit.uk

The UK’s houses are still designed to retain heat. In an age of global warming, that needs to change.

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[-] babboa@lemmy.world 0 points 1 year ago

Houses, public and commercial buildings, everything needs to be rethought. Currently visiting the UK from a much warmer and more humid climate in the states. It's bizarre that it's pleasant outside but almost uniformly uncomfortably warm (and frankly, more important humid) inside. Out hotel room is supposedly air conditioned but stays a uniform 25-26c no matter what the thermostat is set on. It's "working appropriately" according to management and their 3 different maintenance staff that have "adjusted" it, but it is not handling the humidity well. The only saving grace is one of the windows will open ~6in to allow us to open it at night. The bigger picture is how this heat and humidity are going to effect the buildings and their contents. It doesn't take all that long a time for humidity and high indoor temps to allow serious mold issues to start taking hold. People forget the original use of ac wasn't for human comfort but to keep goods (specifically paper) dry so it didn't curl and become unusable by a printing company.

[-] Senseibu@feddit.uk 1 points 1 year ago

Serious mold issues are already a thing over here, in most public housing it’s a serious problem and some kid died from an infestation

this post was submitted on 16 Jun 2023
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