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AUGUST 08 - PASSIVENT STACKS UP FOR MODULAR SCHOOL VENTILATION

Need for additional school accommodation, fast, has led Worcestershire County
Council to an innovative solution, which is simultaneously believed to be one
of the most sustainable modular buildings constructed for educational use...
Restructuring of local schools, and growing demand for places at Bewdley High
School- the only post 16 education provider in the area- meant the school was
facing a pupil roll increase of 360 students this school year. The Council’s
solution was to contract off-site construction specialist Yorkon to build a
new two-storey block containing 12 classrooms and two science laboratories
and a single storey activity studio with toilets and offices, which was as
environmentally-friendly as possible, including passive ventilation from Passivent,
a Biomass boiler using wood fuel and optimum natural light.
To design a ventilation strategy that could be easily installed into the modules
and would achieve or surpass DfES ventilation criteria, Yorkon, Ellesmere Engineering
and Passivent developed a bespoke scheme using the Passive Stack principle
for the classrooms, based around the engineering performance specification
provided by Geoff Carter, Worcestershire County Council’s project mechanical
engineer.
Each passive stack links a ground-floor and first-floor classroom, minimising
the number of roof terminals. Fresh air is drawn into each classroom via an
Aircool ventilator unit below the window and past the radiator providing gentle
background ventilation to the BB101 requirement of 5l/s/p. Stack inlet motorised
louvres positioned in the suspended ceiling draw the fresh air diagonally across
the classroom and up the passive stack riser. High capacity air discharge Airstract
terminals on the roof draw the used air out of the building, and create a constant
change of air within the building without draughts. A boost fan was incorporated
within the roof terminals to develop a mixed mode strategy and increase the
ventilation rate above the specified 10l/s/p when required. The ventilation
is controlled via carbon dioxide and temperature sensors, as part of a low
energy strategy.
Dermot Galvin, project architect at Worcestershire County Council, observed, “The
primary driver for the decision to use off-site construction was time. Yorkon
and Passivent showed the flexibility to meet our specific requirements, including
a number of bespoke elements to create a building that was as environmentally-friendly
as possible.”
Passivent is part of the Building Product Design Group and is the UK’s
leading designer and supplier of natural ventilation systems for both domestic
and commercial applications. The company is a founder member of the NatVent
EC-EU-funded project co-ordinated by the Building Research establishment to
develop practical natural ventilation solutions for the commercial sector,
and has also contributed to the BSRIA Guide BG2/2005 Wind Driven Natural Ventilation
Systems, as well as being a member of the DfES steering committee on natural
ventilation guidance for schools, Building Bulletin 101.
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