Presentation by Dan Epstein of Useful Projects at Circular Economy Thinking in Construction seminar, London 20 January 2017. More information: http://www.greenconstructionboard.org/index.php/2012-09-05-09-17-39/item/2372-circular-economy-thinking-cethinking-challenges-and-opportunities-for-the-construction-sector
Planning for Circular Economy – experiences of Old Oak and Park Royal Development (OPDC)
1.
2. The design Process
Discover:
Articulating the CE
opportunity
Every product is different
Define:
Material flows
Feasibility
Interventions
Develop:
Strategies
LCA and other analysis
Business case
Pilots
Deliver:
Implement and role out
Scale
3. Applying the concept to the
built environment:
Elements & Life cycles
Structure to stuff (S.Brand)
Design/Business models
• Service
• Adaptability
• Longevity
• Refurbishment
• Deconstruction
4. A campaign and programme
to raise awareness.
Over 1000 designers
Understand product life cycles
Rethink the design process
from end of life and closed loop
principles
Cradle to cradle
5. Analytical tools
What's in a product
Scarcity
Ethical issues
How easy is it to reuse
recover or recondition
6. A beautiful new connection
across the Tees
stimulate local pride
economic generator
Start with the local
7. Piles made from Old Russian
Gas Pipes found locally in a
yard
Steel components made in a
local steel fabrication yard
8. Zero Waste Scotland
Future of Oil & Gas
Massive decommissioning
£1.8bn per annum
Rigs taken to Spain and Asia
to be smelted
£200 bn: construct
£200 m: decommission
£2m – salvage value
9. How to build a new
industry
Regulation – BEIS targets
100% recycle – 50% reuse
Investment – new ports and
infrastructure
Know-how – deconstruction
to new markets (warranty and
insure), brokerage
New jobs
10. Major Reuse
Government offices
1950s development
Sold for development
Bid won on proposal to
renovate rather than knock
down
L&R were the developer,
Expedition the engineers
.
21. Rethinking urban food
1/3 of all food in London
goes through Park Royal
30k tonnes of Organic Waste
(HH and Industry)
22. The Royal Garden
1
Existing waste streams are
captured locally and regionally
and transported to a centralised
resource and energy centre.
Import of solid &
organic waste
via barge
Household and
PR industrial
Waste capture
Centralised Resource
& Energy Centre
Import of solid &
organic waste
via rail
Material capture
Resource cconsumption - UK DMC
2015:
Biomass
Metal
Ores
Non-Metallic
2.76 tonnes / capita / annum
0.23 tonnes / capita / annum
3.50 tonnes / capita / annum
2.38 tonnes / capita / annum
TOTAL 8.87 tonnes / capita / annum
Waste generation:
Household waste
Commercial &
Industrial
0.303 tonnes / capita / annum
0.906 tonnes / employee / annum
This equates to almost 14% of materials consumed
23. The Royal Garden
2
Separated waste streams are
processed to create new
sources of energy and useful
resources.
Electricity
Heat
Anaerobic
Digestion
Energy
Generation
from RDF
Energy
Generation
from Biomass
Anaerobic Digestion
Net electricity generation:
Net heat generation:
Solid digestate generation:
6,028 MWh/annum 4% total demand
3,015 MWh/annum 2% total demand
7,537 tonnes/annum
Energy Generation from Biomass
Net electricity generation:
Net heat generation:
Bottom ash generation
32,881 MWh/annum 20% total demand
65,239 MWh/annum 36% total demand
868 tonnes/annum
Energy Generation from RDF
Net electricity generation:
Net heat generation:
Bottom ash generation
96,050 MWh/annum 59% total demand
190,574 MWh/annum 106% total demand
18,054 tonnes/annum
Net Electricity
Net Heat
Solid
Digestate
134,958 MWh/annum
83% of total demand
258,829 MWh/annum
144% of total demand
24. The Royal Garden
3
A network of urban farming
initiatives across Park Royal,
fuelled by local energy and
resources and generating new
food production streams.
Rooftop
Greenhouses
Rooftop
Farming
Green Walls
Rooftop Farming
Vegetable growth rate: 0.847 tonnes/annum/m2
Household food consumption:
Total fruit and vegetables: 8,492 tonnes/annum
Fresh green vegetables: 706 tonnes/annum
Area required to grow total fruit and vegetables: 1 hectare
Area required to grow fresh green vegetables: 834 m2
25. The Royal Garden
4
Logistics networks distribute
produce locally and regionally,
through new and existing
infrastructures.
Distribution
via Rail
Commercial food
distribution
Local food market
Drone Logistics
Local Food Market
Household food consumption:
Total fruit and vegetables 8,492 tonnes/annum
Fresh green vegetables: 706 tonnes/annum
Lettuce production: 72 tonnes/annum
(10% of fresh green vegetable requirements)
NB. This number specifically relates to lettuce production from
digestate from AD that is converted and used as compost
27. Shared
Resource
Platform
+
CE CreditSystem
CommunityToolshed
Citizens are able to easily access
and share local resources, skills
and tools, easing access to one-
time-use items and specialist
knowledge, whilst reducing local
resource consumption as a
whole. This is supported by a
credits system that encourages
participation and exchange.
Digital Platform
Sharing Community
28. Community-Owned
Battery Storage
DomesticBattery
Storage
MicroGrid
+
Demand Side Response
Solar Thermal/PV
Sharing Community
Community-owned
infrastructure enables
neighbourhoods to produce,
store and locally distribute their
own energy and resources,
encouraging sustainable energy
production and reducing
reliance on the national grid.
Demand Side Response
A review of previous demand side response trials with a range
of different tariffs (e.g. Time of Use, Critical Peak Pricing)
found that peak energy demand reductions are 60-200%
greater with automation and / or control by other parties (e.g.
suppliers, Distribution Network Operators) than without.