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PRIVACY
Economic Development

Cornwall's Verto plans 40 Zero Carbon Smart Home development for Exeter

Truro-headquartered housebuilder also looking to build 170 homes in Somerset and a student village in Falmouth

Richard Pearce and Tom Carr of Verto

The º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s leading sustainable housebuilder Verto is to expand further into Devon and Somerset with the next step to create a new community of Exeter’s first carbon-negative homes.

Cornwall-based Verto’s newest development in Pinhoe, which sits on the edge of Exeter, will deliver 40 two-, three-, four- and, five-bedroom Zero Carbon Smart Homes including 10 affordable homes. Work is expected to start in Q2 of this year.

In Somerset, the company has projects in a development pipeline which has the potential to deliver up to an additional 170 homes.

Verto has also submitted a reserved planning application for a world-first Zero Carbon Student Village at Penvose, Falmouth. The site, which will be the first of its kind, will house up to 1,858 students and provide a host of retail and leisure facilities for students and the community.

The site will also alleviate strains placed on the community, including freeing-up of much valued car parking space, as well as housing stock in the towns of Falmouth and Penryn. Verto currently has multiple live projects across the South West, including Carbis Bay, Newquay, Rock, Falmouth and Mylor.

Founded by Tom Carr and Richard Pearce 11 years ago, Truro-headquartered Verto is the first º£½ÇÊÓÆµ housebuilder to specialise in the design, build and sale of smart homes which produce zero carbon emissions.

Already supporting the South West in tackling climate change, it said it is setting the pace for the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ housing industry. The company’s homes deliver Energy Performance Certificate ratings as high as 120A, believed to be the highest in the country currently.

This rating translates to negative two tonnes of carbon dioxide a year, compared to the average household emission of six tonnes of carbon dioxide, an enormous difference of eight tonnes a year per home.