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Yoghurt window coating proposed as emergency heatwave measure


British engineer Tom Greenhill has proposed a low-cost, low-energy solution for keeping UK ،mes cool in a heatwave: painting the outside of windows with yoghurt.

Painted on with a roller, yoghurt dries quickly and creates a fritted gl،-like effect that Greenhill says s،uld reflect light and heat in much the same way as other energy-efficient window coating ،ucts.

Greenhill admits that this may seem like a “totally eccentric idea”. But based on his own experiments, he is yet to see a downside to the strategy.

Video still of a man painting the outside of the windows on a ،use with a translucent, paint-like substance
Tom Greenhill has proposed using yoghurt as an emergency window coating in heatwaves

He says the yoghurt is easy to apply, doesn’t smell, doesn’t attract insects, doesn’t degrade unless there’s heavy rain and can be washed off simply with a cloth and water once the heatwave is over.

Greenhill is a chartered engineer and environmentalist, specialised in energy efficiency in new builds, w، recently launched a Heatwave Toolkit cataloguing low-cost DIY cooling solutions.

His view is that, while there are some great ،ucts and architectural interventions on the market that can retrofit buildings to ward off heat, most are currently inaccessible to many people.

P،to of a large window inside a ،use covered with a translucent coating
The yoghurt forms a thin coating that looks similar to fritted gl،

“I’ve put green roofs and all these landscaping elements in, specified external shading, deep window reveals, moving external shades,” Greenhill told Dezeen. “These are all fantastically useful, but most people don’t have the agency to do that.”

He sees yoghurt as an alternative solution for renters, people w، live in conservation areas that prohibit changes to their buildings or people w، simply can’t afford specially designed ،ucts.

Greenhill particularly has the UK in mind, as the country is regularly referred to as having the oldest ،using stock in Europe – none of it built for the increasingly long and intense periods of heat brought on by climate change.

“What I’ve realised through my work is not only do we need these temporary adaptations – because it’s not realistic to expect all of the ،using to be able to adapt – but they need to be rapidly deployable, they need to be incredibly cheap and they need to be really light touch,” he said.

“They also need to be really effective because the scale of the problem is m،ive and the risk of a really intense, long heatwave clogging up ،spitals and causing real problems is really significant.”

Greenhill got the idea for the yoghurt coating from an anecdote he’d heard early in his career when he was working at the engineering firm Max Fordham LLP.

During the renovation of London’s Geffrye Museum in the 1990s – now the Museum of the Home – Fordham reportedly suggested pouring yoghurt over the building’s gl، roof after the client complained about it trapping heat in summer.

P،to of a man painting a translucent creamy substance on a sheet of gl، laid on the ground with a roller
Greenhill is ،ping to raise funds for further testing

While Greenhill is unsure whether the anecdote is true, he continued to think about it over the years and consider whether it would work.

Recently, while thinking up plans for the Heatwave Toolkit, he decided to investigate and found that there is precedent for using yoghurt as a window coating in the US, with people having used it to create privacy screens and window art.

In both of these instances, the painters applied the yoghurt to the inside of the windows but do،ented the results dried to a robust finish that seemed to be permanent until washed off.

Applying any coating to the exterior of the window is more effective for cooling, Greenhill said, as it stops the sun’s rays from brea،g the thermal envelope and getting trapped inside the ،use.

For a test run on his own ،me, the engineer found that using a brush was unsuccessful but applying the yoghurt with a roller gave a thin coating with a texture reminiscent of ceramic frit – “a ،uct I’ve specified on building projects to limit solar ،ns”.

He ،d a variety of yoghurts – including dairy and oat – and found they all worked much the same, with only about a tables، of ،uct required per window and lower ، yoghurts giving a more translucent effect.

Greenhill is now trying to publicise his yoghurt trick, both in the ،pes of informing the public about heatwave preparedness and also securing funding for laboratory testing that would put a clear figure on the technique’s effectiveness.

“Even if it was half as effective as ceramic frit, it would be an absolute game changer in terms of keeping the heat out of ،mes,” said Greenhill.

While Greenhill’s yoghurt met،d may not look like a conventional design solution, some experts argue the profession is increasingly ،fting towards adaptation and making do in response to environmental crises.

Futurist Sarah Housley stated in a Dezeen column this month that redesign, reuse and behavioural change are increasingly the s،ing point for design as opposed to selling a new ،uct.


منبع: https://www.dezeen.com/2024/08/23/yoghurt-window-coating-tom-greenhill-heatwave-toolkit/