TCI 2016 Industriepark Kleefse Waard
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Transcript of TCI 2016 Industriepark Kleefse Waard
introductionThe Netherlands’ most sustainable and innovative industrial
park. That difficult-to-measure label is what we hope to attain.
Industriepark Kleefse Waard (Kleefse Waard Industrial Park; IPKW) is
a vital community of and for companies that want to contribute to a
sustainable world. We look beyond borders (literally and figuratively),
place a high value on quality and want to maintain what is good
in the world. Area and building development and offering shared
facilities has enabled us to connect users and to create a community.
We don’t just share knowledge; we share (residual) products, waste
and energy. In doing so, we are working on a circular system. This
has both economic and ecological advantages, and offers added
value for parties to opt for a location at the park.
We do all of this with the resources we have at our disposal. The
project is self-supporting and works as a revolving fund. For over ten
years it has worked - sometimes faster, sometimes more slowly - but
we always continue to invest and innovate. We would be happy to
make you part of our story.
Kevin Rijke, Director of IPKW
Bart Schoonderbeek, Director of Schipper Bosch
the main cornerstones:
1. area development
2. community building
3. circularity
These cornerstones are explained in
this booklet, along with several great
projects that show our ambition and
vision for IPKW.
IPKW in the ‘40s
IPKW in the old days From 1940 to 1969, the functionality of the
production process reflected the General
Rayon Union (AKU) factory complex.
From 1969 onwards, this was the AKZO
grounds, a place for new developments.
From 1980 onwards, AKZO’s focus on R&D
gradually decreased (and AKZO took over
Nobel Industries in 1994).
The production and manufacturing industry
moved abroad more and more and the area
became outdated.
In 2003, Schipper Bosch took over the
grounds and started Industriepark
Kleefse Waard.
IPKW in the ‘40s SB building
LB building before LB building after
The LB building before the redevelopment, with window casings that are largely damaged and not energy-efficient and a messy front parking lot.
Dilapidated vacant building.
LB building, redeveloped with new window casings and a renovated front parking lot with an innovative ChargingPlaza.
Modern, sustainable building, with sustainable use of the original building in the redevelopment. The building was made sustainable though the use of concrete core activation, the large windows combined with solar heat storage and movement, air circulation between the original outer wall and the new indoor façade and the natural draft in the chimney, which will be used for air circulation.
1. sustainable redevelopment of the buildings and surrounding areaHigh-end buildings and surroundings mean high-end companies. When we bought
the park, we categorized the buildings into those with historical value, those with
economic value and those without value.
We kept the buildings with economic value, but these will be replaced on the long
term. Buildings with historical value will be renovated one by one and refurbished for
new tenants. This will maintain the monumental look of the park, while ensuring that
all aspects of the building (climatology, interior, look and feel) meet users’ modern
wishes and requirements. Buildings and units without value will be removed.
Buildings with historical value with no new allocation will be temporarily allocated.
HB building afterHB building before
The HB building’s stairwell in 2003.
The HB building’s stairwell now.
Gatehouse before
inspiring, green work environment
Gatehouse after
Gatehouse in 2003, unclear for visitors and doormen, not a welcoming atmosphere.
Gatehouse now, very clear and welcoming through its all-glass bottom layer, an eye-catcher through its color-changing (depending on the light) top layer, built on the foundations of the original building.
Planting around 100 trees over the years and another 100 in the coming year, freeing more and more usable land (such as by planting hemp to replace cotton and purifying water through vegetation) and a higher quality of experience. This is how we work on an inspiring and green work environment for all IPKWers.
HB building before HB building after
HB building and the main street in 2003, with messy shrubs, individual parking spaces, messy signing, no easily accessible entrance, no walking path in the main street, but with nice window casings and an industrial look and feel.
HB building interior in 2003, with old-fashioned ceilings, carpeting, cable ducts and lighting.
HB building and the main street now, with neat, clear signing (on signs and on the building), an accessible entrance, cleaned, with an improved look and feel just by means of trees, a walking path and grass between the road and the building.
HB building interior now, with modern furnishings and an industrial look and feel created by freeing the columns, exposing the ventilation pipes, installing bathrooms as a box in a box (at the back right), renovating the window casings, cable ducts, and carpeting, and installing lighting with an industrial look and feel.
Around 30 charging stations Free boot camp 2x a week
De Waard Restaurant as a living room Green Industry Events (in temporarily vacant spaces)
2. a bustling cleantech communityIPKW is more than a place to work. It’s a place to
be. Where you get together and share knowledge.
The facilities contribute to that; they provide a
stimulus and make it easier to get together.
Central reception
Free shared electric car
Around 30 charging stations
Park management
Technical Maintenance
Shared conference areas
Event areas (in temporarily vacant spaces)
IPKW events: Green Industry Events
De Waard Restaurant as a living room
24/7 security
Free boot camp for IPKWers 2x a week
24/7 security Shared conference areas
Central reception
collaboration with Veolia3. circularity: IPKW as an EcoIndustrial Park IPKW Collection: furniture for the park
restaurant made of residual materials provided
by companies located at the park, researched
and made by IPKW-located product designers
Klaas Kuiken and Luuk Wiehink.
Collaboration with Veolia: companies are no
longer only consumers; they’re also suppliers
of energy and utilities. IPKW offers the following
utilities via Veolia:
- Heat - Electricity - Steam at various pressure levels up to 100 tons p/h - Natural gas - Network maintenance - Various qualities of water - Refrigeration - Compressed air - Waste water purification - Condensate - Inspections
IPKW Collection
Aramid (Teijin Aramid) and Accoya wood (Accsys Technologies) bucket chairs
Table made of plastic bottles (with 4Pet Recycling)
Waste water purification Power plant Lamps made of micro-fiber cloths (with Freudenberg)
circular thinking
sustainability
revolving fund
direct inclusion of surrounding area
security
building redevelopment
LB building renovation
example:
Our mother company Schipper Bosch is a private area
developer, so we do not have an unlimited flow of funds.
That means that we redevelop step by step, and that
things often progress gradually. Maintaining our vision
(with a certain amount of patience) in the meantime is what
makes us progressive. Attracting new tenants from time
to time accelerates the process. Once we have at least
one tenant for a (vacant) building, we start redeveloping.
When redeveloping a building, we include the direct
surroundings. Redeveloping a building and the locations
of the parties involved make a building appealing to more
new tenants, which increases rent income. With that money,
we can redevelop the next building (including its direct
surroundings); every euro is reinvested.
how we redevelop
cocreationWe promote co-creation within and from
several different fields such as the creative
industry and the manufacturing industry.
For example by offering an enthusiastic club of
young, well-known (product) designers a space
at the center of the grounds as a temporary
location (the HE building). We also do so
in collaborative projects with organizations
including ArtEZ and HAN University of Applied
Sciences.
The Greenhouse cleantech incubator Industry is innovating through startups,
education and ideas more and more.
Life cycle thinking among users is important
for the sustainability of the area.
Startups can grow and develop at the park.
Every year, we invest in the Greenhouse,
which in turn provides dynamism, products,
collaborations and potential new (major)
tenants.
Greenhouse went from zero to fifteen startups
in three years’ time.
taking the leadWe like to take the lead in developments
that concern more than just ourselves.
For example, we created the Clean Mobility
Center: a European center for business
innovation in sustainable mobility which will
cover the entire region. With companies
including Allego and EL-KW, we initiated a
plan which more and more parties are joining.
manufacturing locationOriginally, this was a manufacturing industry
location. For example with a focus on fibers,
mobility and wood refinement. We want to
grow in that area and we want to allow the
manufacturing companies to grow as well. We
do so by offering them space, by working with
Veolia to optimally facilitate and by connecting
them to each other and to creative, knowledge-
intensive companies at the park. It enables us to
all work together towards an Eco-Industrial Park.
social responsibilityWe feel that we have a social responsibility for
our surroundings. For example in the Laat maar
Waaien (‘Let the wind blow’) project, in which
600 Gelderland elementary school students
built 150 real working 6-meter high miniature
windmills. Or in the Technology Day, which we
organized to get children and young people
interested in a job in technology.
room for developmentAt IPKW, we offer space for testing and
development. For example, we installed a
test field, where the miniature windmills, solar
panels and an innovative data-processing
container were set up for the Hipersense
project. With this system, we are providing
a reliable energy and data solution in remote
areas lacking infrastructure, but also in densely
populated areas with an overtaxed network.
HE building: the temporary work area for (product) designers at IPKW Minister of Economic Affairs Henk Kamp visiting the Allego workspace (March 2015)
“With the courage and vision that go along with the professional feeling with which he gives the industrial park a promising vision for the future, the commissioner is a true entrepreneur. First and foremost, it is an innovative, entrepreneurial approach. That is what makes entrepreneurship complete, as it involves both well-chosen spatial interventions and a strong, future-oriented program. Industriepark Kleefse Waard has set a new standard for industrial parks.”
Winner Judges’ Report
Minister Plasterk presenting the Gold Pyramid
IPKW won the Gold Pyramid in late 2015.
Commissioners of innovative and inspiring
projects in the Netherlands are considered
for the Gold Pyramid, in the theme of area
development. The award is an initiative
of the Ministry of Infrastructure and the
Environment, the Ministry of Education,
Culture and Science and the Ministry of the
Interior and Kingdom Relations.
For us, the Gold Pyramid is an
acknowledgement of our years of (re)
development, in terms of both the area, the
buildings and our contacts. It’s something
we are very proud of. And at the same time,
we feel like we’ve only just got started.
Gold Pyramid acknowledgement
ENGINEERING FOR SUSTAINABLE GROWTH
designers @ IPKW
we do all of it for and with
our partners City of Arnhem: shared maintenance, marketing,
communications and acquisition
Province of Gelderland: organization of events and
meetings
HAN University of Applied Sciences: Toolgle, testing
field
Veolia: making the power plant more sustainable,
maintaining the water purification system and
structuring a circular economy
Various parties: Clean Mobility Center
The kiEMT [Knowledge and Innovation in Energy
and Environmental Technology] Foundation: network
partner in the cleantech sector
West 8 Urban Design & Landscape Architecture:
urban development design
OFFICE Kersten Geers David Van Severen: building
architect
NL Architects: Gatehouse architect
Schipper Bosch projects (De Kleine Campus, De Nieuwe
Stad, sbnl, Jachthaven ’t Raboes) and participation
(Platowood, RhineTech, Karbouw, The New Motion,
Weltevree, Timmerwerkplaats, VIC): exchanging
knowledge and skills
Project A15: promoting shared electrical transportation
Klaas Kuiken, Luuk Wiehink, Roos Meerman and various
other (product) designers: developing a Design &
Technology area
Various advisors in development, energy and sustainability
Schipper Bosch Project Firm: thinking along and working
in supervision, maintenance, identification and knowledge
exchange
our usersThe ideal mix of users in the start-up phase and renowned
companies. All parties contribute to a more sustainable
world. And in addition to being users, they are actually all
partners.