“…In the quasi-steadystate tests, the amount of energy required to maintain a constant, raised, indoor temperature is measured, and the total heat-transfer rate is inferred by a simple energy balance. The most prevalent example of this method is the co-heating test, which has been in existence since the early 1980s (Everett, 1985;Siviour, 1981), but has been more widely used in the last 10 years in both the UK (Alexander & Jenkins, 2015;Guerra-Santin, Tweed, Jenkins, & Jiang, 2013;Jack, 2015;Jack, Loveday, Allinson, & Lomas, 2015;Johnston et al, 2016;Lowe, Wingfield, Bell, & Bell, 2007;Stafford et al, 2014;Stamp, 2015;Stamp, Lowe, & AltamiranoMedina, 2013;White, 2014) and the rest of Europe (Bauwens & Roels, 2014;Bauwens, Standaert, Decluve, & Roels, 2012;Meulenaer, Veken, Verbeek, & Hens, 2005). The co-heating test is the most commonly and widely used test of whole-building thermal performance at the time of writing.…”