The Crouch Hill Community Park project starts on site next month and will provide new accommodation for Ashmount Primary School and Bowlers Nursery, along with a new community energy centre and a refurbished building for the CAPE Youth Centre within newly designed and improved metropolitan parkland.
The new development will have a carbon negative footprint when in use, the contractor says. This will be achieved by the school sharing heat distribution from the new energy centre with adjacent housing. Willmott Dixon describes this as “a glimpse of how low and zero carbon buildings can be delivered on future UK developments”.
The energy centre, also built within the parkland, will use a biomass boiler and gas fired combined heat and power (CHP) unit to provide the school’s heating and power. Excess heat will go to the adjacent Coleman Mansions housing development owned by Homes for Islington. The school’s use of passive measures to reduce energy consumption further reduces its carbon footprint.
Willmott Dixon is working with a design team comprising of Penoyre and Prasad, AKT, Gifford and Whitelaw Turkington. The school’s ‘zero carbon’ credentials will also see it achieve a BREEAM rating of Outstanding and it will be completed in summer of 2012.
George Martin, director of Willmott Dixon’s in-house low carbon consultancy, Re-Thinking, said: “As we work towards creating new buildings from 2016 that make no net carbon emissions, the new school at Crouch Hill Community Park will provide our industry with an important learning tool for a community-wide approach to low carbon energy that can be refined and developed on future schemes.“
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