Housebuilder to unveil ‘timber-rich’ prototype that challenges conventional construction

Timber-rich prototype home

SCOTTISH housebuilder MAKAR has revealed it is manufacturing an affordable home ‘timber-rich’ prototype that challenges conventional construction.

As the Scottish Government faces the challenge of building 15,000 social houses a year, the firm said the prototype is set to prove that social housing can support local economies through ‘net zero healthy homes’.

“We have developed a local solution to the nationwide housing emergency. We need more homes, but they need to be better homes,” said MAKAR CEO Neil Edgar. “With this prototype home we are demonstrating a unique and, frankly, blindingly obvious solution.

“Working with our local supply chains we can use Scottish timber to precisely manufacture high quality homegrown homes that have very low running costs of around £5 per week. They can be rapidly assembled anywhere in the country. Most new builds use materials with high concentration of chemicals in their building, like treated timber, that can be damaging to our health.

“They also rely on imported or high carbon building materials, like concrete block, pitching environmentalists against homebuilders, and with designs that can lead to damp and mouldy homes. We are trying to reverse this very real problem of low-quality homes built from a business-as-usual approach in a time of crisis.”

The prototype home, made possible by the support of 25 suppliers, will be assembled on-site in just two weeks this November, outside MAKAR’s workshop. Natural timber panels are precision manufactured and assembled, which the company said reduces waste and offers a scalability factor that surpasses on-site construction approaches.