On more than 50 occasions over the past three years, Hannah Bourne-Taylor has lugged an oversized brick through the parliament’s security screening.
Security staff know her fondly as “the swift brick lady”. But now Bourne-Taylor is having to ruffle political feathers over what appears the simplest of nature-friendly measures – a small legal clause requiring all new dwellings to include a £35 hollow brick, providing homes for endangered cavity-nesting birds including swifts, house martins, sparrows and starlings.
After walking naked except for a thong through London – twice – to raise awareness of the plight of swifts, winning a parliamentary debate and cross-party support for the brick, Bourne-Taylor is facing her greatest foe yet: a Labour government terrified of voters defecting to Reform.
So these and a couple other types of bricks I've seen (ones with multiple holes to for masonry bees(?)), have surprisingly high costs for what they are.
While I don't take issue with the stated reasoning for the inclusions of the bricks; I am curious why the the cost is so high, and by extension, who (if anyone) is profiting off of the high costs of the bricks?
If the these become required, will every brick manufacturer be able to produce them, bringing the price of them down?
Are there any obvious unforseen issues with using them?
Is there a limit on their lifespan?
Do they need cleaning by the homeowner?
Fundementally, I think if there aren't any glaring flaws with the requirement for these then this would be an easy win for Labor to add
They seem to be a generic concept - basically they are like bird houses in the shape of a brick, so anyone can make them. The ones I've seen from a quick internet search are all made of different types of plastic stuck together i.e. they are not a really simple thing to make. So I guess that, along with supply and demand (only one or two are needed per new house), is why they are relatively expensive.
Really not sure where you're getting that impression from.
I've just looked it up from a supplier; the cheapest swift brick they sell is £11.50, and they have multiple around the £30 mark. A few larger ones for more money.
The same supplier sells bat bricks for similar, and bee bricks for £25.
Bearing in mind that the cost for a regular normal brick can be north of £1, depending on the specific colouring and design.
Considering the cost of building a whole house, an extra £60 on wildlife bricks doesn't seem that unreasonable.
is £35 a high cost for one of these? It would be 1 per property, sounds alright to me.
For your other questions I think this paragraph suggests they are good to go really (not sure about cleaning, do people clean out bird boxes?):