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'Green and intelligent' - the new mantra for Thai building design


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SUSTAINABILITY
'Green and intelligent' - the new mantra for Thai building design

SOMLUCK SRIMALEE
THE NATION

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DEMAND GROWS AS MULTINATIONALS SEEK REGIONAL HQS; OLDER PROPERTIES ALSO RENOVATED ALONG GREEN LINES

BANGKOK: -- Green and intelligent building is the main concept behind the design of new office, residential and hospitality projects in Thailand, with building owners increasingly committing to an environment-friendly design and construction concept.


A bird's-eye view of Bangkok, which will have more new green buildings while existing buildings will be renovated to reduce electricity bills and CO2 emissions, as the capital becomes a 'green city'.

The trend is also one that is expected to enable owners, of office buildings in particular, to recoup their investment within a shorter timescale.

Pearl Bangkok, a newly launched Bt3-billion office building by Pruksa Real Eastate at Soi Aree, Phaholyothin Road, is one such building that will be completed in 2018.

The project is owned by TCT, a firm that is wholly owned by Thongma Vijitphongpun, who is also a major shareholder in Pruksa Real Estate.

"The idea in designing this building is that we want it to be iconic; its shape is that of an oval pearl because we want the building to be a landmark of Bangkok, which is one of the pearl cities of Asia," Thongma told The Nation.

In line with the goal of giving the city an iconic building, Pearl Bangkok has also been designed under the energy- saving building concept of Leadership in Energy and Environment Design (LEED), which is the standard of the US Green Building Council. The company has applied for Gold LEED certification for the building's core and shell.

Meanwhile, the so-called "Super Tower", which will be the tallest building in Asean when it is completed in 2019 by Grand Canal Land (G Land), has also been designed as environmentally friendly and energy efficient.

The project - designed by Thai company Architect 49 - has been developed in line with the requirements for Platinum certification of the LEED programme.

Aliwassa Pattanathabut, managing director of CB Richard Ellis (Thailand), said office tenants now increasingly preferred LEED-certified buildings, especially if they have a policy to undertake LEED-certified interior fit-outs, which more companies are doing.

Multinationals such as Citibank, Unilever and L'Oreal have all completed LEED fit-outs in their Bangkok offices, and all new Starbucks stores will have LEED-certified interiors.

Thai companies have also undertaken LEED-certified fit-outs, and Kasikornbank achieved LEED CI v2.0 Gold certification in 2011 for its Phaholyothin headquarters project.

People are most familiar with LEED for New Construction or Core and Shell certification applying to new building projects, the latter being intended for buildings that will be rented to multiple tenants that will conduct their own interior fit-outs.

A number of office buildings with LEED Core and Shell certification already exist in Bangkok. Park Ventures and Energy Complex have achieved LEED Platinum status, and Sathorn Square recently completed AIA Capital Centre have both secured LEED Gold certification, she said.

Energy efficiency, low CO2

Pearl Bangkok's floor plan is designed as an oval, and the building will use insulated low-E and low-iron glass, which comprises a ceramic-frit silk screen, to stop heat from entering the interior while allowing natural light to enter the work space. This concept reduces the amount of electricity required for both lighting and airconditioning.

Meanwhile, lighting around the building will be LED (light-emitting diode) with a daylight sensor system, Thongma said, adding that this reduces electricity consumption by about 60 per cent compared compared to fluorescent lamps.

Under the energy- saving programme, Pearl Bangkok will reduce overall electricity usage by about 1 million units a year, or 18 per cent. It will also use a chiller air-conditioning system, reducing electricity consumption and the amount of carbon dioxide released into the atmosphere.

It will also comprise a CO2-detector system that creates fresh air from CO2, accounting for up to 30 per cent of the building's air usage.

The electrical and chiller air-con systems combine to reduce net CO2 emissions by 592 tonnes per year when compared with a standard office building of the same size.

The building will also comprise a water-recycling and treatment system, thus reducing net water usage, which ties in with the building designers' environment-friendly goals, Thongma said.

According to the plan, the building will reduce water usage by an average of 4,686 cubic metres a year, or 40 per cent, compared with a normal building of the same size, he added.

Meanwhile, the Super Tower will use insulated glass to cover the exterior. Inside, a highly efficient air-conditioning system will use variable air volume to ensure a constant temperature. Energy-efficient materials will be used, and solar cells will be installed to generate some of the electricity.

Moreover, bicycle parking will be available, as well as bathrooms for cyclists clean up, further encouraging them to choose this energy- saving transport mode, said G Land's chairman, Yotin Boondicharern.

G Land has recruited Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, one of the world's top experts in tall buildings, as the consulting firm for its Super Tower.

Meanwhile, Golden Land Property Development president Thanapol Sirithanachai, who was formerly president of Univentures, which developed Park Ventures, said when an office building is developed under the LEED concept, and is certified as such, multinationals and larger Thai-based tenants faced a cost challenge to select such a project over a normal office building, as the owners can charge rents that are 10-20 per cent above normal, depending on the location.

The cost of constructing a green building under LEED is also higher than normal - some 10-20 per cent so - depending on whether Silver, Gold or Platinum certification is being sought, he said.

At present, most multinational firms expanding investment overseas, including in Thailand, have a policy to find a green office building from which to operate, rather than a building of traditional design and construction, despite the fact that they have to pay more for the privilege.

This is because a green building offers a work and surrounding environment that leads to greater efficiency and well-being among their employees than if they were housed in a normal building, he explained.

Following this trend, G Land's new office building, the Bt5-billion FYI Centre, has been designed under the green-building theme and is subject to an application for Gold certification from LEED, said Thanapol.

Older buildings can become 'green'

Aliwassa added that it was not only new buildings that could be certified as green, as older buildings could be updated and renovated to achieve green-building status, as well.

This would offer yet more opportunities for office tenants to rent space at a time when the country is targeting being a headquarters hub for the region when the Asean Economic Community comes into effect at the end of this year, she said.

"Most multinationals that expand their investment in the region have a policy to rent green office space as the first priority. When office owners are interested in new green building or renovating their office space as a green building, that will open up business opportunities to get these tenants and also generate higher income over the long term," she added.

She said Thailand was well-placed to attract multinationals seeking an HQ in Asean, as green building costs "don't have to be too high".

According to CB Richard Ellis research, most green buildings in the US charge rents that are 5-10 per cent higher than for normal buildings. Nonetheless, green buildings enjoy higher occupancy rates.

Research also shows that existing buildings renovated under the green concept will recoup their investment after between six and 10 years. That is because they will save 30-50 per cent on electricity bills, depending on the building size, compared with the bills prior to renovation.

Green office buildings also mean staff will work in a better environment, which in turn results in better performance, research found.

Meanwhile, the Kingdom has also established its own green building standard to match the environment. The Thai Green Building Institute's TREES initiative is short for Thailand Rating of Energy and Environmental Sustainability.

Applications have been made for 17 buildings to receive TREES certification since the standard was launched last year.

Also, the new Bangkok city plan promotes green building by providing bonus points entitling a developer to increase the floor-area ratio by up to 20 per cent for a building that wins TREES certification. This is part of the plan to build Bangkok into a "green city" in the future.

Source: http://www.nationmultimedia.com/business/Green-and-intelligent--the-new-mantra-for-Thai-bui-30272688.html

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-- The Nation 2015-11-11

Posted

If the building is going to be as intelligent as the Thais in general, that building will soon implode on

to itself, and as for green, dose selling green papaya in the building count?

Posted

From my observations most of the buildings have a green tinge already when brand new, and become slowly blacker as time passes.

First you learn how to look after what you have, then you can have new shiny stuff - is what I taught my children when they were three years old. Perhaps its not too late to teach Thai property magnates the same...

Can you imagine the slumlords rushing to "greenarise" their scummy buildings? Unless they see it as a way to drastically increase rents, not a chance.

Posted

Green and intelligent? I think this article is about a different country. How can Burmese labors make such things? If I cant find any qualified thai tech people in this country (php, css, javascript, html), how the hell do they think its going to work? maybe they are just going to paint the building "GREEN" and install the "cloud", or more than likely a facebook app, into the buildings. .... -_- lol.

and finally.... THAIS DONT RECYCLE!!! (its reserved for the lowest of low in the classes.) HOW DO YOU TEACH THEM TO PICK UP AFTER THEMSELVES!!!

I separate my trash before i dispose of it. I also... put away my garbage if im at a fast food restaurant. OMG!!

Posted

I would actually like to see a green building revolution here. In my mind, this relies heavily on building a superinsulated building and relying on passive cooling technologies.

I paid a lot of attention to passive when building my home and there many benefits. Cooler both with and without aircon for starters..

Still for the life of my I can't understand why proper ridge and soffit vents are not designed into roofs here. Many locally designed brick and cement homes are basically unlivable in the hot season. facepalm.gif

Posted

Perhaps this so called Green & Intelligent could also be used out in the estates where the use of a compactor is not yet known, neither is uniformed water pipes, incoming pipe into meter size 22mm discharge from meter into house 12mm, mind the water pressure couldn't take 22mm going into our tank you can piss faster.....................coffee1.gif

Posted

Maybe green and intelligent but they are still so ugly. Many spectacularly beautiful buildings going up in Singapore, Taipei, KL, Shanghai but Bangkok always ends up with trash architecture like that monstrous condo at the bottom of Silom ( and the even uglier unfinished ghost tower in close proximity to it).

Is green , intelligent and with architectural merit too much to expect/wish for?

Posted
'Green and intelligent' - the new mantra for Thai building design

"Green and intelligent, but safety last aka rugged under the carpet....." Amazing Smile-land...... cheesy.gifcheesy.gifcheesy.gifcheesy.gifcheesy.gif

Posted

I would actually like to see a green building revolution here. In my mind, this relies heavily on building a superinsulated building and relying on passive cooling technologies.

I paid a lot of attention to passive when building my home and there many benefits. Cooler both with and without aircon for starters..

Still for the life of my I can't understand why proper ridge and soffit vents are not designed into roofs here. Many locally designed brick and cement homes are basically unlivable in the hot season. facepalm.gif

It's interesting how the Thai's have generally turned their backs on their traditional style of architecture developed over 1000's of years in favor of a copy concrete European style with machines to cool them. Maybe you cannot have a Lanna style city simply for fire safety and longevity reasons, but the methods of cooling by building on stilts and venting have been certainly spurned in favor of faux international modernity and not very good at that.

Posted

I would actually like to see a green building revolution here. In my mind, this relies heavily on building a superinsulated building and relying on passive cooling technologies.

I paid a lot of attention to passive when building my home and there many benefits. Cooler both with and without aircon for starters..

Still for the life of my I can't understand why proper ridge and soffit vents are not designed into roofs here. Many locally designed brick and cement homes are basically unlivable in the hot season. facepalm.gif

Posted

Not to mention the lack of damp proof course. Notice the rising damp flaking the paint on the lower reaches of rendered walls. Coupled with the fact concrete rarely sees a vibrator except on prestige construction jobs, e.g. Hospitals and malls.

Posted

Wow,, That would be nice, Building design with intelligent,,That has been lacking so far,,and Green? they wouldn't know what that means,,,This will be a Whole New Thailand for the Future ,,,Wait and see how much it changes compared to the crap they have been building so far,,,,Including our house,,,, whistling.gif

Posted

Exactly! It's a mantra. But, saying it over and over doesn't mean it's gonna happen. It won't be a green city in 100 years. Unless it's underwater

Posted

I'm relieved! When I read 'green and intelligent' I first thought it was about a Chinese with malaria... And after I read it all, I got worried again, didn't think BS would ever sell for the price of gold, as this balloon will not possibly go up as long as 'Thainess' exists.

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