London 2012: Sustainability features per venue

November 24, 2009 · Filed Under Olympic Cities, Olympic News 

Olympic Stadium

  • Lightest Olympic Stadium to date – minimising use of steel and reducing carbon footprint
  • unwanted gas pipelines used for the roof truss which saved producing new steel
  • high recycled content used for concrete foundations
  • materials delivered to site by water, including delivery of pipes
  • bird and bat boxes built into Stadium site
  • recycled granite from King George V docks used for Stadium river banks

Aquatics Centre

  • high recycled content used for concrete foundations
  • Water used to clean the swimming pool filters will be recycled for toilet flushing
  • 3,500sq m of ‘living roof’ – biodiversity space for wildlife
  • Legal and sustainable timber used for cladding
  • Bird and bat boxes built into Aquatics Centre bridge

Velodrome

  • Strategically placed roof lights will reduce on the need for artificial light
  • Almost 100 per cent naturally ventilated
  • Designed to reduce water consumption by 44 per cent
  • Rainwater harvesting for toilet flushing and landscape irrigation
  • Light-weight venue design lowers carbon footprint

Handball

  • 100 per cent recycled aggregate for piling
  • Rainwater harvesting to reduce potable water demand
  • 100 light pipes in the ceiling to allow natural light into the venue
  • Rainwater harvesting to reduce potable water demand

Eton Manor

  • More than  617sq m ‘living roof’ – biodiversity space for wildlife
  • the Park’s 120m tall wind turbine will be built next on the Eton Manor site providing enough energy to power 1,000 homes
  • non-potable water used for irrigation

Olympic Village

  • will achieve the Government’s new ‘Code for Sustainable Homes Level Four’ which is a national environmental standard, resulting in a 44 per cent reduction in carbon emissions and 30 per cent reduction in water use, as well delivering a range of other environmental benefits.
  • first time that a large scale development will meet ‘Level Four’ in the UK

Media Centre

  • 2,500sq m of ‘living roof’  – biodiversity space for wildlife
  • Bird and bat boxes
  • Use of recycled water to flush the toilets and for other non potable uses

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