Offices Nationwide 

Wiltshire - BREEAM Assessments - 0239 366 0106

The office that covers this area is: Portsmouth

The towns & cities that are covered within this county are:
Aldbourne, Alderbury, Allington, Amesbury, Ansty, Axford, Barbury Castle, Beckhampton, Biddestone, Bishopstone, Bradford on Avon, Braydon, Bromham, Broughton Gifford, Burton, Calne, Castle Combe, Cherhill, Chippenham, Chiseldon, Coate, Collingbourne Kingston, Corsham, Cranborne Chase, Devizes, Downton, Eastcott, Enford, Fifield, Foxham, Grafton, Ham, Haxton, Highworth, Lacock, Liddington, Littlecott, Longstreet, Malmesbury, Manton, Melksham, Mere, Monkton Farleigh, Patney, Pewsey, Purton, Ramsbury Ridge, Salisbury, Sedgehill, Snap, Stonehenge, Tidcombe, Tockenham, Trowbridge, Warminster, Wedhampton, Westbury, Wilcot, Wilton, Woodborough, Wootton Bassett, Zeals,

Phone Number: 0239 366 0106 Email: wiltshire@e2consultants.co.uk

BREEAM is sometimes referred to as BREEAM Reports, BREEAM Assessments, BREEAM Assessors, BREEAM Rating, BREEAM Assessment Ratings.

How To Achieve BREEAM Excellence

The scoring for a BREEAM assessment in Wiltshire is as follows:

  • Outstanding: 85%+
  • Excellent: 70%+
  • Very Good: 55%+
  • Good: 45%+
  • Pass: 30%+
  • Unclassified: <30%

Book Your BREEAM Assessment

For further information or to book your BREEAM assessment in Wiltshire, call one of your BREEAM assessors on 0239 366 0106 or email breeam@e2consultants.co.uk.

What Are The Benefits of BREEAM?

It's not unheard of that making a building more environmentally friendly will increase the cost of construction - but BREEAM aims to show that by building this way you will save on operational costs in the future that in turn limit investor costs and makes the property more attractive when reselling.

It's the hope that the BREEAM assessment will help building owners and designers improve their carbon footprint across Wiltshire and make better use of their resources. A BREEAM certification is a way of validating how good a building is in terms of the environmental impact through a globally recognised standard.

How Is BREEAM Assessed?

BREEAM's aim is to educate building designers, owners and occupiers throughout Wiltshire about the impact their building has on the local area. To do this, BREEAM gives a rating of Outstanding, Excellent, Very Good, Good or a Pass based on transport, waste, energy, health, water, pollution, materials, management and ecology.

What Does BREEAM Stand For?

First published by the Building Reseearch Establishment (BRE) in 1990 covering buildings across Wiltshire, BREEAM stands for Building Research Establishment's Enviromental Assement Method.

What Is A BREEAM Rating?

The BREEAM ratings for a new, non-domestic building in Wiltshire are:

  • Pass: standard good practice (top 75%)
  • Good: intermediate good practice (top 50%)
  • Very Good: advanced good practice (top 25%)
  • Excellent: best practice (top 10%)
  • Outstanding: innovator (top 1%)

The maximum score a building can achieve in Wiltshire is 100% from a BREEAM assessment. It used to be that 'Good' was the maximum level that could be achieved, however in 2008 a new 'Outstanding' category was added. The percentage required for each level remained the same despite this.

E2 Specialist Consultants
August 13 at 1:29pm
Today takes 2 of our engineers, air testing this enormous modular classroom in Tring, It took 4 fans to test this space and unfortunately resulted in a Fail. Remedial sealing will be required to areas that we have identified as leaking cold air infiltration. #preperationiskey

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