2 minute read

PONSONBY PARK

PONSONBY PARK - JUNE UPDATE

Not only will Ponsonby Park be a beautiful civic space, but the buildings themselves can play their part in meaningful and ongoing climate change mitigation.

Buildings keep us warm and dry while providing shelter and sanctuary. Yet our buildings are also responsible for significant climate-changing pollution. Emissions from the construction sector have grown by 66 percent in the past decade with the built environment now being responsible for approximately 20 percent of New Zealand’s carbon footprint. The construction and renovation of buildings in New Zealand pumps out climate changing pollution equivalent to the emissions from one million cars on the road every year.

We need to curtail emissions from the building and construction sector by transforming the way our buildings are designed and built, thereby dramatically reducing our carbon footprint and improving people’s health and wellbeing. This is why the community-led design group would like the new Ponsonby Park buildings to be a zerocarbon, Green Star build that has smarter construction techniques, greater resource efficiency, water and energy savings, and lower running costs. This will deliver a healthier environment for everyone who uses them. The energy efficiency of a Green Star building can be improved by 20-30 percent, resulting in significantly reduced operating expenses despite only adding a minimal 1-2 percent additional cost to construction. The technology and know-how to do this already exists and includes; better insulation, the inclusion of airtightness and thermal bridging, improved ventilation, mitigation of overheating, and energy efficiency standards.

There are more than 3000 green building projects in New Zealand, including the 15,500 sq/m Fonterra head office in the Wynyard Quarter which gained a 5 Green Star rating for its indoor environment with all-electric heating to deliver low carbon emissions, an energyefficient thermal envelope, building services design, and a water conservation system using rainwater harvesting. This is precisely what the built form of Ponsonby Park, the new civic space at 254 Ponsonby Road, can achieve and contribute to further reduce our climate change emissions.

Ponsonby Park – Bring It On! (JENNIFER WARD)  PN

www.254ponsonbyrd.org.nz

SRW (SCIENCE RESEARCH WELLNESS) LABORATORIES LAUNCH @ FLYING FISH STUDIO, PONSONBY ROAD

SRW (Science, Research, Wellness) recently held its brand launch at Flying Fish Studio in Ponsonby introducing the world’s first anti-ageing supplements based on the science of the nine hallmarks of ageing. Its BioAge test which reveals one’s ‘real’ biological cellular age was also revealed. srw.co

Top Row: Simon McManus, Fiona Nagy, Virginia Larson & Ashleigh Cometti; Greg Macpherson looks on as Damien Christie reveals to Yin Zhang her biological age test result. Second Row: Colin Mathura-Jeffree & Damien Christie; crowd at the SRW brand launch. Third Row: Jessica Yu, Imogen Cahill, Michelle Anson & Patric Seng; Caitlin Wigg, Dani Robinson & Trudi Brewer; Fourth Row: Rachel Grunwell & Anna King Shahab; Ayla Surtees, Louise Hilsz

This article is from: