The Green
Building
![]() ![]() The Green Building
sits behind Oxford Road Station on a cramped site
wedged in between the railway viaduct and a meander of
the River Medlock.
![]() This area was once one
of the grimmest parts of Manchester. Known as
Little Ireland it was home to many mills and factories
and packed in around the industrial sites were
dwellings of people living in poverty. This
former brownsfield site has been redeveloped and much
of it for residential purposes.
The "Designbuild-Network" web site says this about the Green Building. "The building employs the concept of low-energy architecture. Its body and skin have been designed to consume minimal energy, and all materials have been chosen to minimise embodied energy. The structure is cylindrical in shape, reducing surface-to-volume ratios and reducing fabric losses. Its truncated roof faces southwards, deriving maximum benefit from solar energy. The reinforced concrete structure acts as a temperature regulator. Energy is absorbed into the thermal mass of the structure during warm weather and released during cooler periods. The use of natural materials ensures low embodied energy and thermal performance. The atrium is at the heart of the building's natural ventilation system. Wind pressures and stack effects mean that during the cooler seasons air moves in from low-level intakes and out at high-level openings." ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() In 2011 a 33-storey
student residence building was under construction
across the street from the Green Building.
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