Scottish housing standard
In March 2021, the Scottish Government announced plans for a legal requirement for all homes to meet the same standards.
Intended to ensure the equal quality of homes, the Scottish housing standard will apply to all tenures. It is considered an important element of Housing to 2040, which will set the path for how Scotland’s homes and communities should look and feel in 2040
Communities Secretary Aileen Campbell said it will create a single set of quality and accessibility standards; “...aligned to standards for energy efficiency and heating, meeting expectations for housing as a human right and delivering homes that underpin health and wellbeing... This will cover all homes, new and existing, with no margins of tolerance for substandard accommodation. Importantly we will also enshrine the Standard in law.
“The Scottish Government will work with local authorities, registered social landlords, private landlords and communities to drive improvements to the quality of all homes so that everyone is living in good quality accommodation, regardless of whether they own it or rent it from a private or social landlord. Our existing homes need to keep pace with new homes to ensure no one is left behind.”
The Scottish Government plans to publish a draft Standard in 2023 and introduce legislation in 2024-25 for phased introduction between 2025 and 2030, recognising that different types of homes in different places may need more or less time to achieve compliance.
NB The Tolerable Standard for housing was introduced in 1969. It has been added to periodically, setting out minimum requirements for habitation. Under the 1969 standard, owners and landlords can work towards different quality requirements with separate mechanisms for enforcement, depending on the tenure of a home. There are also exceptions in some local circumstances, such as homes in rural areas, agricultural properties or hard to treat buildings.
[edit] Related articles on Designing Buildings Wiki
- Achieving net zero in social housing.
- Building regulations.
- Code for Sustainable Homes.
- Design quality for buildings.
- Scotland publishes plans to reach net zero targets with Heat in Buildings Strategy.
- Scotland reaches homebuilding milestone in 2021.
- Scottish planning policy.
- Technical housing standards – nationally described space standard.
- Zero carbon homes.
[edit] External resources
- Scottish Government, Housing to 2040.
Featured articles and news
Designing for neurodiversity: driving change for the better
Accessible inclusive design translated into reality.
RIBA detailed response to Grenfell Inquiry Phase 2 report
Briefing notes following its initial 4 September response.
Approved Document B: Fire Safety from March
Current and future changes with historical documentation.
A New Year, a new look for BSRIA
As phase 1 of the BSRIA Living Laboratory is completed.
A must-attend event for the architecture industry.
Caroline Gumble to step down as CIOB CEO in 2025
After transformative tenure take on a leadership role within the engineering sector.
RIDDOR and the provisional statistics for 2023 / 2024
Work related deaths; over 50 percent from constructuon and 50 percent recorded as fall from height.
Solar PV company fined for health and safety failure
Work at height not properly planned and failure to take suitable steps to prevent a fall.
The term value when assessing the viability of developments
Consultation on the compulsory purchase process, compensation reforms and potential removal of hope value.
Trees are part of the history of how places have developed.
The increasing costs of repair and remediation
Highlighted by regulator of social housing, as acceleration plan continues.
Free topic guide on mould in buildings
The new TG 26/2024 published by BSRIA.
Greater control for LAs over private rental selective licensing
A brief explanation of changes with the NRLA response.
Practice costs for architectural technologists
Salary standards and working out what you’re worth.
The Health and Safety Executive at 50
And over 200 years of Operational Safety and Health.
Thermal imaging surveys a brief intro
Thermal Imaging of Buildings; a pocket guide BG 72/2017.