It's Green Week at cepezed. This morning, Joost Jacobi gave us a glimpse of his work for Wavin, where he deals with 'water circular design' in cities. It's more of a mission than just work, it soon turned out.
windmill
One of the first images Joost shows is a small, steel windmill at the edge of a green roof with water retention. This little mill symbolises the 'polder roof' which MetroPolder developed before it merged into Wavin. Just as the Dutch polders form a water system with their windmills, polder roofs do so in miniature. At least flat roofs, especially new build, that are strong enough. And there are plenty of those: Wavin makes 'water circular designs' for several housing projects in major cities in the Netherlands, but also in New York City, for example.
5 c's
Joost and his colleagues use five c's to explain what they mean by water circular. The nod to the circular economy's r-ladder deliberately also echoes the pressing need to tackle it this way. The five c's are: catch, collect, connect, clean and control. For all five, Wavin develops smart systems. For instance, the weather forecast is connected to the valves of the retention crates. Previously retained water is released to absorb expected peak downpours.
regulations
'Release', by the way, absolutely does not mean to discharge to the sewer. Because water is not waste in Wavin's philosophy. Fortunately, regulations are increasingly going along with this. New building roofs in Amsterdam are required to be able to absorb and retain a peak rainfall of sixty millimetres. Eindhoven and Utrecht are preparing similar regulations as Amsterdam; in Utrecht it would even be eighty millimetres. This is necessary, as Joost's experience is that, unfortunately, real estate developers usually choose exactly the mandatory percentage and not a millimetre more.
text continues below the photos
windmill
One of the first images Joost shows is a small, steel windmill at the edge of a green roof with water retention. This little mill symbolises the 'polder roof' which MetroPolder developed before it merged into Wavin. Just as the Dutch polders form a water system with their windmills, polder roofs do so in miniature. At least flat roofs, especially new build, that are strong enough. And there are plenty of those: Wavin makes 'water circular designs' for several housing projects in major cities in the Netherlands, but also in New York City, for example.
5 c's
Joost and his colleagues use five c's to explain what they mean by water circular. The nod to the circular economy's r-ladder deliberately also echoes the pressing need to tackle it this way. The five c's are: catch, collect, connect, clean and control. For all five, Wavin develops smart systems. For instance, the weather forecast is connected to the valves of the retention crates. Previously retained water is released to absorb expected peak downpours.
regulations
'Release', by the way, absolutely does not mean to discharge to the sewer. Because water is not waste in Wavin's philosophy. Fortunately, regulations are increasingly going along with this. New building roofs in Amsterdam are required to be able to absorb and retain a peak rainfall of sixty millimetres. Eindhoven and Utrecht are preparing similar regulations as Amsterdam; in Utrecht it would even be eighty millimetres. This is necessary, as Joost's experience is that, unfortunately, real estate developers usually choose exactly the mandatory percentage and not a millimetre more.
text continues below the photos