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Conference Paper: Sky Woodland for Urban Power Transmission Substation in Hong Kong

TitleSky Woodland for Urban Power Transmission Substation in Hong Kong
Authors
Keywordsgreen building
green roof
native woodland
electricity substation
sustainable development
Issue Date2007
PublisherThe Hong Kong Professional Green Building Council (PGBC)
Citation
The Sustainable Building Conference 2007, Hong Kong, 3-6 December 2007. In Lau, SSY, Chan, EHW and Tang, GWK et al. (Eds.), Creating Livable, Healthy And Environmentally Viable Cities – An Asian Perspective, p. 223-236. Hong Kong: The Hong Kong Professional Green Building Council (PGBC), 2007 How to Cite?
AbstractCLP Power Hong Kong Limited generates and supplies reliable electricity to over 2.2 million customers in its supply area. It owns about 210 transmission substation buildings. Many green initiatives have been incorporated into recently built substations. This paper introduces a green building initiative Sky Woodland, at Sham Mong Road Substation on a building of 7 m tall for completion in mid 2008. This pioneering pilot project contributes both environmental and scientific research value, aiming at exploring the viability and effectiveness of creating an intensive green roof on the top of a substation building. Native tree species have been chosen for tree form, foliage, seasonal colours and attractive flowers. They will be planted closely to establish a crown interlocking effect and to emulate a natural woodland. Sapling or standard trees of about 2 ~ 4 m in height will be planted to reach a medium final height of 8 ~ 10 m. Specially designed drainage, water storage and soil layers will provide a suitable substrate to support woodland growth. Environmental monitoring will be conducted to evaluate the wide range of benefits to both the public and the company, such as pleasant green landscape for the site and surrounding residents, reduction of air and indoor temperature, improvement of air quality, and extending the life span of the building roof. The challenges of the project include tree selection against occasional typhoon damage, landscape design, tree transplanting and establishment, building load bearing capacity, and protection and the separation of building provisions. The valuable experience could facilitate future green roof installation of the company and other local developments.
Persistent Identifierhttp://hdl.handle.net/10722/118438
ISBN

 

DC FieldValueLanguage
dc.contributor.authorChoi, YHen_HK
dc.contributor.authorIp, Aen_HK
dc.contributor.authorHo, Jen_HK
dc.contributor.authorJim, CYen_HK
dc.date.accessioned2010-09-26T08:05:27Z-
dc.date.available2010-09-26T08:05:27Z-
dc.date.issued2007en_HK
dc.identifier.citationThe Sustainable Building Conference 2007, Hong Kong, 3-6 December 2007. In Lau, SSY, Chan, EHW and Tang, GWK et al. (Eds.), Creating Livable, Healthy And Environmentally Viable Cities – An Asian Perspective, p. 223-236. Hong Kong: The Hong Kong Professional Green Building Council (PGBC), 2007-
dc.identifier.isbn978-988-17808-1-2-
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10722/118438-
dc.description.abstractCLP Power Hong Kong Limited generates and supplies reliable electricity to over 2.2 million customers in its supply area. It owns about 210 transmission substation buildings. Many green initiatives have been incorporated into recently built substations. This paper introduces a green building initiative Sky Woodland, at Sham Mong Road Substation on a building of 7 m tall for completion in mid 2008. This pioneering pilot project contributes both environmental and scientific research value, aiming at exploring the viability and effectiveness of creating an intensive green roof on the top of a substation building. Native tree species have been chosen for tree form, foliage, seasonal colours and attractive flowers. They will be planted closely to establish a crown interlocking effect and to emulate a natural woodland. Sapling or standard trees of about 2 ~ 4 m in height will be planted to reach a medium final height of 8 ~ 10 m. Specially designed drainage, water storage and soil layers will provide a suitable substrate to support woodland growth. Environmental monitoring will be conducted to evaluate the wide range of benefits to both the public and the company, such as pleasant green landscape for the site and surrounding residents, reduction of air and indoor temperature, improvement of air quality, and extending the life span of the building roof. The challenges of the project include tree selection against occasional typhoon damage, landscape design, tree transplanting and establishment, building load bearing capacity, and protection and the separation of building provisions. The valuable experience could facilitate future green roof installation of the company and other local developments.-
dc.languageengen_HK
dc.publisherThe Hong Kong Professional Green Building Council (PGBC)-
dc.relation.ispartofCreating Livable, Healthy And Environmentally Viable Cities – An Asian Perspective-
dc.subjectgreen building-
dc.subjectgreen roof-
dc.subjectnative woodland-
dc.subjectelectricity substation-
dc.subjectsustainable development-
dc.titleSky Woodland for Urban Power Transmission Substation in Hong Kongen_HK
dc.typeConference_Paperen_HK
dc.description.naturelink_to_OA_fulltext-
dc.identifier.hkuros164831en_HK

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