Permalink: https://media.greenpeace.org/archive/Thermographic-Images-of-Heat-Loss-in-European-Cities-27MZIFL9Y2SW.htmlConceptually similarThermographic Images of Heat Loss in European CitiesGP0FWFCompleted★★★★Thermographic Images of Heat Loss in European CitiesGP010NOCompleted★★★★Thermographic Images of Heat Loss in European CitiesGP017TRCompleted★★★★Thermographic Images of Heat Loss in European CitiesGP01E3DCompleted★★★★Thermographic Images of Heat Loss in European CitiesGP016G6Completed★★★★Thermographic Images of Heat Loss in European CitiesGP014J1Completed★★★★Thermographic Images of Heat Loss in European CitiesGP01HYCompleted★★★★Thermographic Images of Heat Loss in European CitiesGP0STVCompleted★★★★Thermographic Images of Heat Loss in European CitiesGP0WS9Completed★★★★View AllGP017TQThermographic Images of Heat Loss in European CitiesThermographic infrared photographs showing serious heat loss in buildings across European countries. The thermographic camera shows details the eye cannot detect. Yellow and red areas are parts of the buildings which have a higher surface temperature than the rest. These are the places where heat is leaking through gaps and poor insulating materials and valuable energy is being lost, resulting in both damage to the environment due to a waste of energy resources and unnecessary costs for home owners and tenants. A typical weak point is window panes and frames and thin walls below windows, where radiators are commonly positioned and insulation should be optimal.Locations:Europe, West Europe-Netherlands-South Holland-The HagueDate:9 Jul, 2007Credit:© GreenpeaceMaximum size:1813px X 1455pxKeywords:Buildings-Climate (campaign title)-Energy-KWCI (GPI)-Measuring tools-ThermographyShoot:Thermographic Images of Heat Loss in European CitiesThermographic infrared photographs showing serious heat loss in buildings across European countries. The thermographic camera shows details the eye cannot detect. Yellow and red areas are parts of the buildings which have a higher surface area than the rest. These are the places where heat is leaking through gaps and poor insulating materials and valuable energy is being lost, resulting in both damage to the environment due to a waste of energy resources and unnecessary costs for home owners and tenants. A typical weak point is window panes and frames and thin walls below windows, where radiators are commonly positioned and insulation should be optimal.