A Veolia composting facility in East Sussex which recycles green
waste into organic soil conditioner is using Dimplex electric
heating and solar thermal hot water to optimise its own energy
efficiency.
In addition to five full-time staff based at the Woodlands Centre at
Whitesmith near Uckfield, the site receives up to 60 visitors a
week, including the general public, schools, and local authorities
from across Europe, all coming to investigate environmental best
practice - so a comfortable environment is vital and Dimplex’s
flexible electric heating offered an ideal solution.
Dimplex EPX panel heaters with a four-zone electronic programmer
were specified for the high-specification single-storey control room
and visitor centre, and in keeping with the environmentally-friendly
purpose of the facility, Dimplex solar thermal water heating was
installed to meet the hot water requirement for the washrooms,
showers and kitchenette.
The offices and visitor centre have been designed to be as ‘green’
as possible, being highly insulated and externally clad with cedar.
Electric heating performs very well in modern airtight buildings,
maximising energy efficiency, while the solar thermal water heating
supplies plenty of low carbon hot water.
100 percent efficient electric appliances have no waste, no
emissions, no on-site storage concerns and no need for an annual
safety inspection, making them ideal for commercial developments.
Running costs are kept to a minimum by the sophisticated Dimplex
four-zone electronic controller, which can maintain different
operating patterns in different zones, for example, boosting the
temperature in the changing rooms ready for the end of a work shift.
The installation was carried out by Staffordshire-based R&C
Electrical Engineers Ltd. Installer Matt Houghton comments: “We’re
very familiar with Dimplex and its heating products, so we knew
these would be ideal. It was our first solar thermal water heating
installation, but everything came together very easily.”
Three solar panels were specified, together with a 300 litre solar
cylinder with supplementary immersion coil to top up the solar
warmth when necessary. “Due to the placement of the panels for
optimum efficiency and the design of the building, the pipework ran
externally over the roof,” says Matt. “We opted for hard tubing to
give protection from the elements, and made sure the system was well
insulated to hold on to the heat from the panels. Push fit
connectors made the installation very straightforward.”
The majority of the site houses an enclosed in-vessel composting
facility capable of turning 46,000 tonnes a year of consumers’ green
waste and kitchen scraps into high quality compost. The facility
opened in October 2009 and easily coped with the harshest winter in
30 years; although there was over 30cm of snow on the ground, the
Dimplex panel heaters coped easily with the extreme conditions.
Martin Prior, Veolia’s transfer and IVC manager at the facility,
says: “The offices are kept very warm and comfortable by the Dimplex
heaters. The composting area has been designed to look agricultural
and fit with the landscape, but there’s a real contrast with the
high-spec office interiors. The control room/viewing area has large
glass panels to view the composting tunnels, but even this is no
challenge to the heating system - visitors have often commented how
comfortable the facilities are, and how unexpected when they come to
view a composting facility.”
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