Energy monitoring put to good use
Two of the lodges have all their hot water on solar systems with immersion top up (they sleep 4-6 people). Larger Beech Lodge sleeps 6-8 and has solar hot water for its bath and basins (with immersion top up), but not for its shower, which is on-demand electic. Otter cottage is different - and I'll come back to that!
After we finished the solar installation, we meant to change the shower in Beech Lodge over to solar hot water in the autumn, but held off, worrying that the winter sun in Devon wouldnt be anything like enough to provide hot water for a potential 8 showers a day, and that the immersion heater would be slow to keep up too - especially as we have a timer switch limiting the heaters to two hours on at a time.
And now, the energy monitoring confirms that this was a good choice, and in fact has persuaded us not to change it at all. Look at this graph of energy use per night for all 4 of our holiday accommodation units.
That's probably because more people are sharing the winter heating component in the larger lodge. And that's probably also part of the reason that Otter Cottage energy use per guest night soars in the winter. The cottage attracts more couples than families, and its conventional stone construciton makes it harder to heat.
There are some other excuses. Otter cottage electricity supply runs the shared washing machine and also an always-on pump. Nevertheless, having now seen Otter Cottage's rising winter consumption we'll be looking for ways to reduce it. Solar hot water, planned for this spring, would probably be good here - it would run the bath and basin (and probably the shower too as there are fewer guests to service).
And we have some other ideas for making the space heating more efficient - but that's for another post.
Labels: energy, management and marketing

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