/ARCHITECTURE/newswire -- COMO, CO, ITALY -- SUNDAY, 29 DECEMBER 2024, 10:07 UTC+1
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AUSTRALIA -- /ARCHITECTURE/newswire -- Nov 03, 2019
Adrian Light's sustainable transformation of a disused vinegar factory into a family home and architecture studio challenges traditional construction methods and promotes sustainability.
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Adrian Light's project involved the sustainable adaptive re-use of a disused vinegar factory, challenging traditional construction methods. The building, constructed in 1890, was transformed into a 4-storey structure, with the ground floor serving as an architecture studio and the three levels above as a family home. The project's construction phase involved a zero-waste policy, with all building materials collected onsite and sorted into recyclable categories.
The project's unique feature lies in its zero waste solution, where everything onsite was re-used, recycled, or repurposed. The vats from the vinegar factory were ingeniously repurposed as planters, workstations, toilets, laundry, and even a fishpond. Natural light floods the building, a result of removing a third of the roof to create a garden court.
Adrian Light's sustainable approach challenges the way buildings are traditionally constructed, promoting sustainability and environmental consciousness in the architectural industry.
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AUSTRALIA -- /ARCHITECTURE/newswire -- Oct 25, 2019
Adrian Light's ONE20 designed the Nottingham NHS Day Treatment Centre to deliver high levels of sustainability and modern state-of-the-art facilities for the UK government initiative.
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