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Home > Awards > Balloo Waste Transfer Station and Recycling Centre, Bangor
Balloo Waste Transfer
Station and Recycling Centre, Bangor |
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Whole Project Award
Project team:
Client: North
Down Borough Council
Design team: Michael
Whitley Architects
Lead Consultant: Albert
Fry Associate Engineers, AH
Design M&E Consultants, VB
Evans Quantity Surveyors
Main Contractor: Heron
Brothers Ltd.
The project
The Waste Transfer Station is a facility comprising
10,000m2 of machine, technology and administrative support
space, which will swallow the waste of an entire borough
on a weekly basis. After being sorted, compacted and
contained, all collected waste is transferred in sealed
containers to various recycling agencies and other appropriate
destinations. The brief called for the facility to be
one of the cleanest and most efficient in Europe. Aptly
the only by-product of the building will be distilled
water.
Design philosophy
The facility is located on a brownfield site along
Balloo Drive in Bangor, hitherto a lacklustre link between
ring roads. Contextually, the size of the scheme is
large. Indeed the designers identified the facility’s
substantive form as key to the re-stitching of a somewhat
frayed piece of urban fabric, believing that its articulated
mass will give the locale some much-needed definition
and identity. The efficiency of vehicle movement required
within, overlaid with pedestrian circulation patterns
and site conditions, dictated the form further.
It was seen as important that this facility would
have its own architecture – a principle shared
and adopted by the client body. The philosophy behind
this was that the waste industry has for too long been
housed in buildings which are products of utilitarianism
at best, or short-termism at worst, and this is reflective
of the values that society has placed on waste and its
management. Society in the past has perceived the waste
management industry as dirty and a fact of life that
would be best hidden out of sight and thus out of mind.
The design challenges that perception and asserts
that waste management is a high-agenda, clean and modern
business-based industry, which should relate on a civic
level with society. As a result the new facility is
vibrant, boldly intentional in terms of size, shape
and colour, and challenges perceptions of the waste
industry – by its own staff and the public alike.
Use of renewable energy sources
Beyond the choice of the site, the scheme is designed
to be self-sustaining in its day-to-day life. This is
realised by use of solar thermal panels for heating,
900m2 of photovoltaic surface generating electricity
for all lighting, an 850KW wind turbine for general
power to all plant, and a 72,000-litre rainwater-harvesting
tank for wash-down facilities.
Sustainable construction
Carbon production during construction was massively
reduced by specifying GGBS concrete mixes throughout
– ranging from a 36% mix right up to 75% slag
content.
The site is drained entirely via a Sustainable Drainage
System (SuDS) consisting of slow-flow ponds and swales
– thereby also rejuvenating a nearby wood and
pond landscape.
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