I should probably write a bot to auto-reply when someone pulls a state as a comparison.
(Or ask the resident flamingo nicely to write it 😀)
I’ll put the gist of why hot weather can be a pain in the UK so it’s in the thread, not aimed at you obviously:
Most housing was built around coping with -5 to 25’c comfortably.
Which for a long time meant no insulation, and a fire/wet central heating system.
And not a damn was given about air-tightness.
A lot of the housing pre-dates WW1
Air conditioning was not commonplace at all when the majority of houses were built (you could argue it still isn’t)
Heatwaves were so infrequent, it wasn’t worth the cost of installing air conditioning domestically.
It gets muggy as hell, with the high humidity making it worse. (But again, it’s variable, so tricky to justify spending money)
Swamp coolers don’t work due to the humidity
Lots of people grew up with the weather being (generally) mild enough that opening a window to get airflow was enough to keep cool. (I’ve had family members open the windows on a 30’ day to “cool” my 20’ basement…)
Leccy is expensive. This is improving with solar and plunge pricing, but most people will want to tighten up their house in other ways before spending £8/day cooling it.
With both our warming climate, and more kit being installed, things are changing, and people are adapting.
More people now understand that cooling the fabric of the house at night when it dips into the teens, then closing the windows in the morning, is a better way to keep it cool.
Building regulations stipulate significantly more insulation, air-tightness, heat gain control.
And air conditioning has dropped in price a lot.
For anyone curious, you can DIY a mini-split for about £500/room, or get a better quality one installed for under £2000.
I mean, retrofitting whole-house HVAC is a pain, but it’s not hard to get a window unit.
We tend to want a 240V heavy appliance outlet for beefier window air conditioners, but you’ve already got that as standard on British household circuits.
EDIT: Hmm. This says that the British convention is swinging windows, which aren’t as amenable to window units, and one should get a (slightly noisier and less efficient) portable unit instead of a window unit. But basically, same idea. I’d get a unit with dual hoses; doesn’t cost much more, more efficient.
Also there’s literally no point installing air conditioning because heat waves are still infrequent enough that you’d only use it for maybe 2 weeks of the year.
Window units literally don’t exist in the UK. Air conditioning is for rich people and businesses here. Portable units are also generally terrible, they’re loud and only manage to cool a room by a few degrees C.
most portable units i’ve seen are the one-hose kind, which barely does anything because it creates negative pressure inside and then the house is just sucking hot air in through every crack
you have to have a minisplit installed if you want proper AC, which is hundreds of dollars. also, it’s cool if you already have AC installed, but there’s not gonna be an AC installer with free time when there’s a massive heatwave like this, because everyone’s clamoring for AC.
To grab a random city in a toasty state over here in the US, Phoenix, Arizona’s current high today is 116°F, or 46.6°C.
That’s nice. What’s the humidity?
https://www.thepoke.com/2025/06/19/this-american-explained-why-brits-always-moan-about-the-heat-and-it-never-felt-more-relevant-than-it-does-now/
I swear there is always a yank that has to say this. Are you guys hired in bulk or?
I should probably write a bot to auto-reply when someone pulls a state as a comparison.
(Or ask the resident flamingo nicely to write it 😀)
I’ll put the gist of why hot weather can be a pain in the UK so it’s in the thread, not aimed at you obviously:
Which for a long time meant no insulation, and a fire/wet central heating system.
And not a damn was given about air-tightness.
With both our warming climate, and more kit being installed, things are changing, and people are adapting.
More people now understand that cooling the fabric of the house at night when it dips into the teens, then closing the windows in the morning, is a better way to keep it cool.
Building regulations stipulate significantly more insulation, air-tightness, heat gain control.
And air conditioning has dropped in price a lot.
For anyone curious, you can DIY a mini-split for about £500/room, or get a better quality one installed for under £2000.
yeah but you have AC which is too technologically advanced for the third world country that is the united kingdom
I mean, retrofitting whole-house HVAC is a pain, but it’s not hard to get a window unit.
We tend to want a 240V heavy appliance outlet for beefier window air conditioners, but you’ve already got that as standard on British household circuits.
EDIT: Hmm. This says that the British convention is swinging windows, which aren’t as amenable to window units, and one should get a (slightly noisier and less efficient) portable unit instead of a window unit. But basically, same idea. I’d get a unit with dual hoses; doesn’t cost much more, more efficient.
Also there’s literally no point installing air conditioning because heat waves are still infrequent enough that you’d only use it for maybe 2 weeks of the year.
Window units literally don’t exist in the UK. Air conditioning is for rich people and businesses here. Portable units are also generally terrible, they’re loud and only manage to cool a room by a few degrees C.
most portable units i’ve seen are the one-hose kind, which barely does anything because it creates negative pressure inside and then the house is just sucking hot air in through every crack
you have to have a minisplit installed if you want proper AC, which is hundreds of dollars. also, it’s cool if you already have AC installed, but there’s not gonna be an AC installer with free time when there’s a massive heatwave like this, because everyone’s clamoring for AC.
you’d have to make sure the house isn’t leaking heat/cold like a sieve first otherwise you’re wasting ungodly amounts of money
Yeah, but it’s a dry heat.