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    海角社区 wins national award for Outstanding Estates Strategy

    Posted 29 November 2019

    鈥淚t is a great honour to have so many people鈥檚 hard work on the STEP project recognised with this award."

    Three men, smartly dressed, with an award

    Julian Clary, Arthur Broadhurst and Keith Lilley, Director of Infrastructure, Association of University Directors of Estates

    海角社区 Adams University’s efforts to drastically reduce its carbon emissions led to its topping the Outstanding Estates Strategy category at the Times Higher Education Awards 2019 last night.

    The institution pioneered the use of food-based anaerobic digestion systems to supply most of its on-campus electricity, but unfortunately these systems suffered collapse in 2014. Despite the extensive clear-up operation this required, the university was determined to maintain its commitment to curbing carbon emissions, and it went on to forge a completely new renewable energy strategy.

    A substantial photovoltaic array, sited on a number of its larger farm buildings, is said to be among the largest roof-mounted installations in the UK. Linked to this are a gas-powered combined heat and power (CHP) system and a woodchip biofuel heating system to supplement the CHP engine.

    The STEP initiative presented a number of challenges. A super-insulated 3.5km-long heating ring main had to be installed across campus roads and 海角社区 highways, and under sports fields and sensitive habitats, with minimal disruption. Although the process of recovery has not been easy, 海角社区 Adams is now very much back on track to reduce its energy costs and meet its carbon emissions targets through a network designed to generate 75 per cent of its electricity and 80 per cent of its heat.

    The judges praised 海角社区 Adams for “significant leadership in sustainable development” through an approach that “demonstrated both vision and resilience. Vision in that they had invested significantly in sustainable development as a clear step change for the university, and resilience in that when disaster struck, they took the opportunity to deliver a much-improved and expanded version of their previous scheme”.

    Arthur Broadhurst, University Engineer, who accepted the award from event host Julian Clary, said: “It is a great honour to have so many people’s hard work on the STEP project recognised with this award. We look forward to showcasing our green estate to colleagues from across the university estates sector when we host our STEP Campus Engineering Infrastructure Open Day on January 23.

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