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Set in the shadow of Macgillycuddy's Reeks, Killorglin, County Kerry is a dramatic and rugged location best known as a tourist destination and home to Puck Fair. It’s also home, however, to one of Ireland’s most successful companies, FEXCO, which has opened its new low-energy corporate headquarters in the town. Construct Ireland's Jason Walsh visited the site to find out about the strategies used to promote sustainability in a high-tech environment.
FEXCO, originally the Foreign Exchange Company of Ireland, is a business success story. Focussed on global payment services and financial transaction processing, FEXCO distributes millions of international payment transactions annually and is perhaps best-known as a Western Union money transfer Super Agent and operator (partnering with An Post) of the Irish government's Prize Bonds. Founded in 1981 as a bureau de change, FEXCO’s business rapidly developed into the high-tech financial transaction market. As a result of its business being computer-oriented, when it came to designing its new head office FEXCO had specific space and cooling requirements that had to be addressed in the building’s design.
Industrial design for rural landscapes
Completed in 2005, the building was designed by architect Deirdre Waddington, who had previously worked extensively in central and west Africa as well as on several ecclesiastical buildings in Britain. Built to accommodate 200 staff, the site, an abandoned factory situated in a disused railway yard on Iveragh Road, was acquired by FEXCO eighteen years prior to its construction.
According to FEXCO, the site’s central location “seemed to demand a structure tall enough to hold its own against the adjacent town centre buildings.” Brian McCarthy, the company’s founder and Chairman asked Deirdre Waddington to incorporate the remnants of the 1885 limestone railway station, with its distinctive brick arched doorways, into the 3,000 sq. metres of new office accommodation needed within the footprint of the old factory.
The internal garden
This
posed the design problem of relating two storey offices to a low-lying
single storey structure, which had a double-pitched slate roof – and to
do this without interrupting FEXCO’s communications-intensive business.
Deirdre Waddington’s solution was to move the main entrance from
the south façade to the western side of the new building and create a
new two storey rectangular steel-framed structure with a mono-pitched
roof oriented at 10 degrees to the original building. The new structure
is linked to part of the factory shed, which needed to be maintained
because it housed the communications room by a top-lit foyer widening
out towards a central trapezoidal courtyard.
The entrance doors now open into an airy reception space, which leads
directly to the heart of the building where the double-height
staff-canteen area overlooks an internal garden. South-facing curtain
walling to the canteen is screened by horizontal sun breakers spaced to
allow views of the McGillycuddy Reeks from the first floor corridor of
the adjoining offices. Maximum advantage has been taken of the
north-facing aspect in order to minimise solar heat gain while openings
on the eastern and western facades exposed to the low morning and
evening sun have been kept comparatively small.
Precision engineering
Of course, alongside its architectural design, the building is also
significant for its attention to environmental sustainability.
Central to the building’s sustainability measures is a Solterra geothermal heating and cooling system designed by Dunstar.
However, before such a system can even be contemplated a building must
be fit for its use. Dunstar’s founder, Dr. Paul Sikora, a physicist by
profession, says the FEXCO office is just such a building: “[FEXCO]
were quite positive about incorporating sustainable elements in
whatever way they could. As the company expanded it took some trouble
to find an architect who was similarly enthused. There was a lot of
care taken with the [building’s] envelope.”
Dunstar designed a geothermal heating and cooling system that draws
on three bore holes drilled into aquifers below the site. The offices
are fully air-conditioned but use is made of natural ventilation in the
foyer and canteen. Finally, a solar panel on a south facing roof
supplies hot water to toilets and the canteen.
The double-height staff canteen area
“One of the things that made it challenging was the heat from the IT
activity,” says Sikora. “You can have a requirement for both heating
and cooling at the same time.”
The value equation
As always, cost is a factor –
and geothermal systems don’t come cheap. The cost of the plant room and
wells was of the order of €250,000, plus VAT.
Despite the installation cost, Sikora sees the system as a valuable
investment that will lower costs over time: “For a similar system using
LPG or oil, the payback should be around nine to ten years – and there
have been fuel cost hikes since then,” he says.
Sikora is adamant that geothermal energy is an efficient and useful
source of heating and cooling: “Heat in the ground is just slightly
less refined than what we need. A heat pump just refines it and you
don’t destroy any resources in the process of doing so,” he says.
The Solterra geothermal combined heating and cooling system control panel
“The cooling capacity is a little over 300kW and the heating capacity
is close to 400kW but [the building] needs much less – heat is at
around 200kW and the cooling runs to about 300kW,” he says.
“When the system is working its full cooling output is probably
using 70-75kW of electricity and that same input could deliver 400kW of
heat. It remains more cost effective and CO2 effective than oil or
gas.”
On the point of heat pumps requiring electricity which in, Ireland,
is usually generated from fossil-fuel sources, Sikora says: “It should
push us to develop more solar, wind and tidal power.”
Clearly, Ireland has seen an incredible growth in renewable energy
and energy efficiency in the last five years. According to Sikora,
geothermal will have a greater role to play as ever-more owners of
large buildings begin to address their energy requirements with
renewable sources: “The whole of the Irish [renewable energy] industry
is very young – very few firms were active more than four years ago.”
Indeed. As interest in sustainable energy sources has moved into
the mainstream, driven more by rising energy costs and a posteriori
predictions of oil shortages than a priori environmentalism, Ireland
has suddenly found itself with a plethora of energy options and
suppliers.
The Solterra geothermal combined heating and cooling system
According
to Sikora, appropriate choices must be made depending on the scale
required: “Geothermal differs from solar in that engineering skills are
required in every installation,” he says. “A one size fits all approach
will end up very far off the mark.
“We’ve been doing research and development [for] over twenty years
and learnt a lot of tricks of the trade. The Irish climate – and even
geology – is rather different from that in Scandinavia or even
continental Europe,” he says.
Installation issues
The primary mechanical
contractor on the project was Killarney Mechanical Services, to whom
Dunstar was a sub-contractor. Jerome Kennedy from Killarney Mechanical
Services explains that the Fexco was something of a first in terms of
scale, though his company had worked with Dunstar previously on the
Motor Tax office in Tralee.
The Solterra geothermal combined heating and cooling system distribution header for hot water
Completed in 1999, the Motor Tax office was the first high-performance environmentally sustainable building in the country.
However, Kennedy is convinced that it will not be the last such
installation: “It’s definitely going to become more common when you
have these large office spaces that need both heating and cooling,” he
says.
“The building is working so well that FEXCO’s staff in other buildings want to look into it,” he says.
In fact, work has already been completed on a similar project:
“We’ve done an identical system in the building next-door, a joint
venture between Laune Properties and Kerry County Council,” says
Kennedy. “It was handed over just before Christmas 2006.”
Neilus Hunt of Malachy Walsh and Partners, consulting engineers on
the project explains how the initial decision to go with geothermal was
made: “We brought on board a geologist to investigate whether there was
sufficient water in the ground [to supply a heating and cooling
system].
“The architect, Deirdre Waddington, was of great help to us,
especially putting in enough insulation. [In fact] the main point about
the Fexco building was the willingness of the client to try something
different and of the architect to spend more on insulation.
Hunt is understandably upbeat about the project’s success: “Comfort
levels are critical to staff comfort – and, hence, work. If it can work
in a building like this, it can work anywhere,” he says.
“The geothermal system is working mostly at cooling. Even in the
depths of winter it’s in cooling mode. It has a modulating compression
so it can react [to internal conditions] as necessary.”
According to Hunt, in fact, the only reason the building uses solar
power for heating water is a health and safety issue, designed to
inhibit the growth of bacteria: “The geothermal operates most
effectively at 30 to 40 degrees. To kill off Legionnaires’ [disease]
you need to go up to 55 degrees.”
As noted above, FEXCO is a technology-centric business with the
majority of staff operating computers. Obviously this had an effect not
only of the building’s architectural design but also in terms of
heating and cooling requirements and even the heating system’s layout.
As Sikora says: “The thing that did the most dictating of the
services was the building’s setup and placement of the IT equipment. We
couldn’t use underfloor heating across the rooms due to the presence of
cable ducts under the false floor.”
As a result, the underfloor heating is confined to the edges of
rooms and workstations are kept away from this area. Despite the
compromise, it works perfectly well.
The building’s ventilation system, meanwhile, features three
air-handling units: “Cooling air comes in from the air-handling units,
pushed into vents and through the rest of the building,” says Sikora.
“An air-handling unit is essentially a big box where the air is
brought in, filtered, partially exhausted if it’s polluted, and
topped-up. It’s a box with filters, fans, heating and cooling systems.
The whole philosophy is to change the condition of the air as little as
possible to create an ideal environment.”
Due to the presence of cable ducts for
workstations across the centre of the floor, underfloor heating was
confined to the edge of the rooms There are a total of three
wells supplying heating and cooling to the FEXCO building. The
shallowest bore hole is 60-70 metres and the deepest is 110-120 metres:
“There are submersible pumps at the bottom of the wells. Each well has
a different water delivery capacity and the [building management]
computer determines how much is required and chooses an appropriately
yielding well,” says Sikora.
“It differs in that any other form of ground source would not be practical here as there isn’t enough space on-site.”
In capacity terms, Sikora’s system at FEXCO’s headquarters claims
to be the largest heat pump in Ireland. It is designed around two
water-to-water heat exchangers, one dumps heat into the well and the
other extracts it.
The cold water temperature is maintained at 6 degrees while the hot
water is held between 45 and 50 degrees, all controllable from the
building’s computerised management system.
Sikora predicts, based on actual performance of a similar system he
designed for the Lewis Glucksman art gallery, up to 75 per cent energy
reduction, post-installation.
The primary heat pump has an estimated lifespan of 25 to 30 years:
“In general it’s much longer-lived than combustion equipment,” Sikora
laughs.
Despite the growing interest in both geothermal energy in general
and Sikora’s unique heating and cooling designs, he does admit being
sometimes faced with total confusion when explaining how it works to
the public: “It’s a problem that affects everyone in the business,
people say ‘How can you take heat out of something cold?’
“People don’t think about fridges and the heat they generate – looking for heat in a cold place offends people’s intuition.”
Selected project team members:
Client: FEXCO
Architect: Deirdre Waddington RIBA
Contractor: Pat Mahony Construction Ltd.
Consulting Engineers: Malachy Walsh and Partners
Mechanical and Electrical Engineers: Killarney Mechanical Services
System: Dunstar Ltd.
Value: €6.3 million
- puck fair
- killorglin
- fexco
- Geothermal
- heat pump
- dunstar
- cooling system
- underfloor heating
- solar panel
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