Home Services Passivhaus Gallery Get in Touch
Case Study — Passivhaus New Build, Suffolk

Fieldview

A new build designed and constructed to Passivhaus principles from the ground up — standing seam metal roof, timber cladding, and an airtightness result verified by blower door test on completion.

Roof
Standing Seam Metal
Cladding
Timber, Vertical Board
Fabric
Passivhaus Principles
Airtightness
Blower Door Tested
The Brief

A new build that performs as good as it looks

Fieldview was conceived from the outset as a fabric-first, low-energy home — the kind of build where performance is designed in from the foundations up, not bolted on afterwards. The brief called for a striking, contemporary barn-form structure with a standing seam metal roof and natural timber cladding, built to a genuinely airtight, well-insulated standard throughout. From trench to completion, every stage was carried out with the final airtightness result in mind.

Standing seam metal roof meeting timber cladding, Fieldview
Roof & Cladding

Standing seam metal,
built to last

The roof is finished in standing seam metal — a durable, low-maintenance covering that gives the building its clean, contemporary silhouette and works well with the steep pitch of the barn form. Detailing around the dormers and rooflights was carried out to the same exacting standard as the rest of the fabric, since every junction is a potential weak point for both weather and air tightness.

The walls are clad in timber, left to weather naturally over time. Combined with the dark roofline, the result is a building that sits comfortably in its rural setting while still feeling distinctly contemporary.

Fabric First

Proven on site,
not just on paper

Passivhaus-standard performance only means something if it's actually verified. On Fieldview, that meant installing a continuous airtightness membrane around the entire building envelope, taping every junction, service penetration and window reveal by hand — then testing it properly with a blower door.

The result is a home that holds its heat, resists draughts, and performs the way it was designed to — not just the way it was specified on a drawing.

Verified On Site
Blower Door Tested

Continuous airtightness membrane installed and taped at every junction, then pressure tested to verify performance before completion.

Blower door airtightness test in progress, Fieldview
The Test

Putting the build
under pressure

A blower door test works by sealing a calibrated fan into an external doorway and either pressurising or depressurising the building to measure exactly how much air is escaping through gaps in the fabric. It's the only reliable way to know whether an airtightness strategy has actually worked, rather than just assuming it has.

On Fieldview, the membrane and tape detailing held up well under test — proof that the care taken during construction translated into real, measurable performance once the building was finished.

How We Built It

From trenches to tested airtightness

Foundation trenches being dug, Fieldview
01

Trenches

Foundation trenches dug and set out across the full building footprint.

Blockwork foundations and drainage, Fieldview
02

Foundations

Blockwork foundations laid with drainage runs in place ahead of the slab.

Roof OSB sheathing and frame, Fieldview
03

Frame & Roof

Timber frame erected and roof sheathed in OSB ready for the standing seam covering.

Airtightness membrane installation, Fieldview
04

Airtightness

Continuous membrane installed and taped at every junction throughout the building.

Finished engineered flooring, Fieldview living space
05

Finished Interior

Engineered timber flooring and final fit-out complete throughout.

The Details

Where the fabric meets the finish

Timber cladding craft detail, Fieldview
Cladding Detail
Standing seam roof dormer detail, Fieldview
Roof Dormer Detail
Airtightness membrane detail, Fieldview
Airtightness Detail
Finished patio doors and interior, Fieldview
Patio Doors
Finished exterior front elevation, Fieldview
Front Elevation
Finished exterior rear elevation, Fieldview
Rear Elevation
"
We wanted a home that was as efficient to run as it was beautiful to look at. Lestrange delivered both — and proved it with the blower door test, not just promises.
— Client, Fieldview
Start Your Project

Thinking about a Passivhaus build of your own?

Whether you're planning a new build or want a fabric-first approach to an extension, we'd be glad to talk it through.

Get in Touch → Learn About Passivhaus