Blackswanwood":1oj9wkx3 said:
I am having some plans drawn up for a workshop. It is going to be brick/block construction with a floor area of circa 30 sqm. The workshop will be detached from the house so needs independent heating.
The architect is suggesting using an air to air heat source pump. I am a bit sceptical but can only find positive “advertorials” online for them. If they are so good why are they not more common?
Any thoughts or advice will be most welcome.
An air source heat pump for 30 sq metres? Hmmmm......
Air source heat pumps have been the subject of one of the most successful rebranding and marketing exercises in recent history. They're an airconditioning unit, that's all. They're just fitted the other way around, with cold air exhausted to the outside rather than the inside of a building. They never achieve the results that are quoted for them, and it is really just glorified electric heating, which in Britain means it isn't doing very much for your carbon footprint if that's a concern.
Personally, I think it a mistake to make a workshop out of brick and block, because of the thermal inefficiences of the wall compared with a timber framed wall as relates to an intermittently heated space. You'll get a warmer, more responsive, and cheaper to run workshop if you build with timber instead.
Finally, using an airconditioner for heating a workshop means a fan blowing air around, and that isn't necessarily a good thing in a dusty environment.