Vancouver / Canada

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House & Hotel Magazine likes the green city and ecoluxury projects.

We like the Vancouver Olympic village.

Here were hosted 3000 world-class athletes for the Vancouver Winter Games.

The Millennium Group worked with the City of Vancouver to develop the village that is home to Vancouver’s last downtown waterfront community, framed with extraordinary views of the city’s downtown skyline with a dramatic backdrop of the North Shore mountains.

The 14 acre landmark development, Millennium Water, is an urban centre for residential, commercial/retail and public use and a ground breaking sustainable community that will set a precedent for future projects in Canada and North America.

SEFC buildings will be a showcase of sustainable development; the lavishly landscaped development comprises a total of 1,122 low- and mid-rise apartment buildings to be converted to condo units, with 60% marketing housing and 20% rental and social housing.

The City of Vancouver required the development to have 50% coverage of living roofs; greenroofs are one of the most visible green aspects of the Olympic Village, and at least half of the 22 buildings’ roofs are greened. “Many other sustainable features are included – The buildings also reuse rainwater to flush toilets and irrigate landscaping, and the project is built close to mass transit. And the most innovative green project is a $28 million system that takes heat from untreated sewage to provide heating and hot water to the village and surrounding neighborhood — all while reducing greenhouse gases.

Residents moving to Southeast False Creek will benefit from the City’s Neighbourhood Energy Utility (NEU) project.

The first of its kind in North America, NEU will supply hot water and heating to residents by garnering heat from the sewer system.

This initiative will reduce carbon emissions by 7,700 tonnes a year, which is equivalent to taking over 1,900 cars off the road, (City of Vancouver).

The Canadian Green Building Council announced the Gold certification of all residential buildings on the Millennium Water site. In addition, the U.S. Green Building Council awarded LEED® Platinum ND to the Olympic Village in Vancouver’s Southeast False Creek community as a whole. While there are at least 22 buildings greened at the Olympic Village, we are presenting this 287,000 sf profile as only one total project. Below is an overview of Millennium Water’s originally proposed greenroof program, slated for 50% planted roofs:

The intent of the green roofs on this project are to reduce the heat island effect of urban development, provide plants to clean the air and add oxygen and provide improved views from adjacent taller buildings. The green roofs provide minor storm water management benefits and they are sloped to drain.

Dozens of trees and shrubs have been planted onsite and on rooftops, including magnolia, crabapple, styrax, witch hazel, yew, camellia, sarcococca and boxwood. The potential for rooftop urban agriculture and community interaction will be achieved through the various intensive greenroofs.

Keep goin.

Living in style.

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