Heating a Georgian country house in rural Shropshire was costing a small fortune in oil for the owner, but there were also limits on potential improvements which could be made to the thermal properties of the Grade II listed property.
Originally built in 1794, Henlle Hall, in Gobowen near Oswestry is the home of Cosmo Lloyd and his family who have developed the grounds of the estate into a relaxing country retreat with a combination of courtyard cottages and woodland lodges.
“The solution was to add three Ecodan 11kW renewable heat pumps to provide the majority of heating throughout the year, with the oil boiler kicking in as a last resort when the weather turns extremely cold”, explained Mr Lloyd.
In addition to the 13 bedrooms, Henlle Hall has six grand rooms on the ground floor. “It is a fantastic, historic building but it is also leaky and there is not much we can do because of the Grade II Listing”, said Mr Lloyd.
Three PUHZ-HW112VHA(-BS) Ecodan units have been installed discretely outside the rear of the property and these work in a cascade system, which means that the heat pumps work individually or together to respond accurately to the heating requirements of the property.
The demand is also rotated between the units so that the work is shared between all three, maximising efficiency and helping prolong the system’s lifespan.
Ecodan’s advanced intelligent controls mean that the heat pumps work in a hybrid situation with the oil boiler, deciding which heating system to use at any one time to ensure that the house is heated in the most economical way possible.
“We had thought that we would simply have to put up with the high costs of running on oil and the problems with winter deliveries, but now, this is so much better all round ”, added Mr Lloyd.
“We also qualify for the Renewable Heat Incentive on every kW of renewable heating that the Ecodan system generates”.