I. SUMMARY INFORMATION
Project
268401
Status
Submitted
Award category
Solutions for the co-evolution of built environment and nature
You want to submit
NEW EUROPEAN BAUHAUS AWARDS : existing completed examples
Project title
Building as material bank
Full project title
Circular office - Building as material bank
Description
The pilot project “New office building” is located in Essen, Germany, directly on the UNESCO world heritage site of “Zeche Zollverein”, a former coal mine industrial complex.
The project is intended to be a pilot for renewable design with a special focus on the Cradle to Cradle design principles focusing on transformable and recyclable design, healthy
materials and the use of a “Material Passports”. The multipurpose roof landscape compensates for the ground area occupied by the development.
Where was your project implemented in the EU?
Germany
Nordrhein-Westfalen
Im Welterbe 10
Essen
45141
When was your project implemented?
Has your project benefited from EU programmes or funds?
No
Which programme(s) or fund(s)? Provide the name of the programme(s)/fund(s), the strand/action line as relevant and the year.
II. DESCRIPTION OF THE PROJECT
Please provide a summary of your project
The new administrative headquarters of RAG Stiftung and RAG AG is located at the UNESCO World Heritage Site Zollverein in Essen. It is the first project in Germany that has implemented comprehensive measures inspired by the cradleto-cradle principles (C2C) [see c2ccertified.org, www. epea.com]; moreover, it has received a DGNB certificate with the highest Platinum rating. The accessible planted roof compensates for the building footprint and returns the covered area back to nature and mankind. The objective was to create an office building with highest sustainability standards which provides adequate space for the users and a structure that is embedded in the listed World Heritage complex in a sensitive way.The choice of the location on the originally industrial grounds of Zollverein means that priority was given to the recycling of the brownfield site of the former coal mine. On basis of the C2C-principles four added value ideas were defined for the building: 1. positive for human environment, 2. building as a power plant, 3. healthy + flexible working environment and 4. building as material bank. The closed-loop building generates energy, functions as a material bank and meets the highest requirements in terms of indoor air quality. The roof garden not only increases the biodiversity for flora and fauna and affects an improvement of the micro climate and air quality, it also functions as a space for the building occupants to linger, relax and communicate. Within the EU research project ‘Buildings as Material Banks ’, the building was chosen as a pilot project and the materials used were documented in a material passport. This means that materials and components have not only been chosen for their health and environmental aspects but, more than anything else, for their circular economy strategies with the effect that the quality of raw materials is retained until the building reaches the end of its lifecycle and then functions as a resource bank.
Please give information about the key objectives of your project in terms of sustainability and how these have been met
Building material passport -> Material bank
Energy certificate -> Low CO2 emission, highest energy efficiency
Use of renewable energy: Geothermal plant and roof-mounted photovoltaic pergola
Charging station for electric cars and e-bikes
Water: Rainwater collection to water the planted roof and flush the toilets
Biodiversity: Green rooftop, urban gardening
Indoor health: Highest internal comfort, positive defined healthy materials based on Cradle to Cradle principles, VOCtesting in-situ
Cradle to Cradle certified materials: Aluminium profiles + glass panes, carpet tiles with dust-binding properties, glass partition wall system etc.
Green building certification with highest DGNB rating: Platinum
Please give information about the key objectives of your project in terms of aesthetics and quality of experience beyond functionality and how these have been met
Cradle to Cradle® is a design principle developed in the 1990s by Prof. Dr. Michael Braungart, William McDonough and EPEA Hamburg. It describes the safe and potentially infinite circulation of materials and nutrients in two cycles. In the biological cycle, consumables, such as natural fibers, circulate and can be safely returned into the cycle after use. In the technical cycle, consumer goods circulate, such as electronic items or floors and are being reused all over again. These products chosen are optimized in the design and manufacturing process as resources for the next phase of use. All ingredients are chemically harmless and recyclable according to Cradle to Cradle®. The accessible planted roof landscape compensates for the area sealed by the development and offers a valuable space with an identity of its own at the intersection between the industrial cultural and natural landscape. The desire to give some of the nature back to the developed land has been achieved by creating an intensively planted roof. Mediating between the cultural and natural environments, the outcome is a green zone that in itself has become part of the landscape. Raised areas above the canteen and the corner rooms function as stepped seating areas; paths and terraces make the exterior space accessible. In between, a variety of shrubs, small bushes, a herb garden and a photovoltaic pergola as well as nest boxes for bats clearly refer to the issues of energy generation and use of natural resources. Consequently, the building offers its occupants high-quality exterior space and, at the same time, has a positive impact on the microclimate and biodiversity of the location. This leads to a relevant improvement of the quality of stay in the building, an improvement of the users' health and a lower impact on the environment.
Please give information about the key objectives of your project in terms of inclusion and how these have been met
The project “New office building” is located in Essen, Ruhrarea in Germany, directly on the UNESCO world heritage site of “Zeche Zollverein”, a former coal mine industrial complex, visited by over 1,5 million people per year. The demolition of pre-existing structures has already taken place before 2015 the project was set up, and the client has taken over the site as a prepared brown field. The new office building will host over 200 high quality office work places for the RAG Group. The total gross floor area will be approx. 10,000 m², with a total gross volume of approx. 39,000 m³. The project was intended to be a pilot for sustainable design of the next genation building with a special focus on the Cradle to Cradle design principles focusing on transformable and recyclable design, healthy materials and the use of a “Material Passports”. Also, parts of the building are planned to be accessible for public (e.g. the rooftop garden of approximately 3000 m²). Today's EU Taxonomy for sustainbale finance requests 6 main goals for 2050, all those goals can be already showed in this new office building. Why? Because the Cradle to Cradle® design principle in in line with the 6 goals of the EU Taxonomy.
Please give information on the results/impacts achieved by your project in relation to the category you apply for
Thermal building simulations and energy calculations have been used to improve renewable energy performance of the building in operation. In order to fulfill the holistic requirements this new sustainability approach including circularity was to find or develop a tool that enables a very detailed documentation of all the materials integrated in the building. This allows auditing the construction in terms of material health, environmental impact adaptability and recyclability, even during the planning and design process. At the same time, it provides all the information needed when the building shall be modified and adjusted to different purposes or finally deconstructed while generating a minimum amount of waste. Utilizing buildings as material banks and thus recycling them either completely or parts of them in high quality applications again and again is considerably simplified by compiling a comprehensive documentary of the components used in them during construction. The “Building Material Passport” has been developed as a concept for a tool fulfilling all these requirements and subsequently was to be applied under the realistic background of a project development scenario on the German market. As it applies to this building, the “Materials Passport” refers not only individual construction products or building materials, but rather to the entire structure of the building at all levels. It can therefore be understood as a “Buildings’ Materials Passport” that covers the whole building which is greater than the maximum data depth for individual products.
Please explain the way citizens benefiting from or affected by the project and civil society have been involved in the project and what has been the impact of this involvement on the project
The rooftop garden of approximately 3000 m² is accessible for the public in agreement with the building owner. Other benefits include usage of regenerative sources of energy,
improved indoor air quality and closed water cycle. It is the first building project with C2C dedign principle in Germany and thus a starting example for the building industry, architects and cities to transfer this experience to own projects (like The Cradle in Düsseldorf, Cicular City in Munich, Moringa in Hamburg etc.). The results have been published HERE for everybody to see and use. Cradle to
Cradle® dsign principles have been published HERE and HERE.
.
By implementing the material passport and recyclable design aspects within the project it will be possible to divert 4641tons of waste from landfills, 91 tons of waste will not have to be disposed thermally and an additional 12108 tons of material can be recycled into products of equal quality.
Please highlight the innovative character of the project
First time a building is established according to circular design principles and construction and used a Building Material Passport as design and documentation tool. A quality assurance process for the choice of materials was implemented that goes far beyond the legal standard for new buildings. Particular attention was paid to building products that are in direct contact with the interior. By using building products with low emission values and healthy content, a high quality of the interior air is guaranteed. Green walls and a dust-binding carpet ensure a pleasant indoor climate. The multifunctional, extensive green roof creates a highquality space for recreation and functions as a retention area for rainwater. For energy production and as a shading measure, pergolas equipped with PV modules were erected over the usable area and multiple charging stations for electric cars and e-bikes were built. To ensure a conversion at the end of the building’s lifecycle, flexible and circular constructions were implemented in the design - instead of load-bearing interior walls, lightweight walls were installed. In order to increase the separability and regeneration of the materials, adhesive bonding was largely replaced by mechanical connections. A carpet made of regenerative fibres and a C2C-certified parquet flooring were used as the floor covering. Both are part of a manufacturer's take-back system. All materials used are documented in a Material Passport that turns the building into a raw material depot for valuable materials. The RAG building is DGNB Platinum certified. The principles of the Cradle to Cradle® design framework help to achieve better, sustainable performance.
Please explain how the project led to results or learnings which could be transferred to other interested parties
As the biggest consumer of raw materials worldwide and producer of enormous quantities of waste, the construction industry is responsible like almost no other industry sector. Fast and efficient solutions for climate and resource problems must be realised for the construction of new buildings. Building on today’s sustainability standards, which already far exceed the existing legislation, we have a solution for the resource problem with the Cradle to Cradle® framework. According to this, buildings can be created like trees and cities like forests. For a positive footprint for people, society and the environment. A new discipline within the scope of the integrated planning of buildings has been created with “circular engineering”; this enables answers for all questions concerning the regeneration and materials used in buildings. Circular engineering not only provides knowledge in the areas of planning and construction processes but also a high level of expertise in health and environmental compatibility of materials and available industrial products. In this context, the “Building Material Passport” serves as a planning and documentation tool, for enabling the circulation of a building in collaboration with architects, all planning disciplines as well as the construction firms. For completed construction projects, the Building Material Passport additionally provides detailed information on which of the used materials can be easily separated, as well as on the chemical composition of the products used in the building. It is also possible to determine the monetary value of the structures used in the buildings. This information on the building provides you with considerable added value for financing, through aspects of risk assessment, value determination as well as the operation of the building. The implementation of the Cradle to Cradle® design framework does not compete with building certifications according to DGNB, LEED, BREAM or HQE.
Is an evaluation report or any relevant independent evaluation source available?
III. UPLOAD PICTURES
IV. VALIDATION
By ticking this box, you declare that all the information provided in this form is factually correct, that the proposed project has not been proposed for the Awards more than once under the same category and that it has not been subject to any type of investigation, which could lead to a financial correction because of irregularities or fraud.
Yes