09/2011 City of Westminster College, Paddington Green Campus

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

09/2011 City of Westminster College, Paddington Green Campus Evolve Energy Ltd. 65-71 Bermondsey Street London SE1 3XF closeclose to to yo youu 0207 378 7623 REFERENCE | 09/2011 City of Westminster College, Paddington Green Campus, London CentraLine maximises HVAC system’s energy efficiency Introduction The prestigious £102 million Paddington Green “CentraLine has a great range of energy Campus was designed by leading Danish architects efficient products which can be easily integrated Schmidt Hammer Lassen. The 24,000m² building to allow the required levels of control and opened in January 2011 and won a 2011 RIBA Award monitoring, while ensuring the right ambience and for architectural excellence. The design features comfort.” a distinctive stepped façade and full height central atrium with natural light. Customer value The CentraLine system sets ideal parameters and Requirements ensures the plant is controlled energy The HVAC system had to be designed to provide efficiently. The LYNX controllers ensure the HVAC optimum operational performance and to manage plant operates only when parts of the building are energy consumption, without compromising comfort. occupied and demanding energy. Its facilities include specialist science labs, a wide range of engineering and construction All factors such as time programs, room occupancy, workshops, a double-height sports hall, dance energy generation and distribution, set point studio, fitness suite and a 140-seat theatre. values and air quality are continuously monitored for potential savings, leading to exceptionally Solution economical operation. Maintaining air quality in The CentraLine solution includes over 30 HAWK the different areas and matching it exactly to the integrated HVAC controllers and 300 LYNX terminal number of students and staff leads directly to unit controllers, along with four touch screens more efficient operation. Manual switching and associated valves and actuators. overrides allow facilities and maintenance teams Rob Oakley of Ashdown Control Services commented: to react quickly to unscheduled activities. The CentraLine Products combination of LYNX and HAWK controllers provides a complete Open Protocol solution from field level through to the enterprise level. Field Devices HAWK CL TOUCH LYNX www.centraline.com.
Recommended publications
  • Venue: City of Westminster College: Paddington Green Campus, Paddington Green, London W2 1NB
    Venue: City of Westminster College: Paddington Green Campus, Paddington Green, London W2 1NB Google Maps Link: https://maps.google.co.uk/maps?ie=utf- 8&gl=uk&daddr=Paddington+Green+Campus,+Paddington+Green,+London+W2+1NB&panel=1&f=d &fb=1&dirflg=d&geocode=0,51.521366,- 0.174933&cid=0,0,10359591107328907017&hq=city+of+westminster+college&hnear=city+of+west minster+college PDF London Underground Map: http://www.tfl.gov.uk/assets/downloads/standard-tube-map.pdf Nearest Tube Station to City of Westiminster College: Edgware Road served by the Bakerloo, Hammersmith & City, District and Circle Lines. Hotels The venue is extremely close to PADDINGTON which is chocca with hotels and a bit of a tourist hotspot. You will find hotels across all price points here. Paddington is also a major mainline station and walking distance to the college. Directions From Nearest Mainline Stations From Euston Station: Allow 40 mins from the Euston to the College including walking time By Black Cab: A cab will get you there in less than 15 mins – will cost under £10. By Tube: You will have to physically leave Euston Mainline Station and walk the 5 mins to Euston Square where you can get on the Hammersmith & City or Circle Line to Edgware Road. By Bus: The Number 18 from Euston runs to the Edgware Road. It leaves from the main road outside Euston Station but you need to cross the main road and check you are going in the direction of Harlesden. The buses will not accept money, so you either need to Purchase an Oyster Card and put money on it or you some but stops have ticket machines by them but not all.
    [Show full text]
  • City of Westminster
    St. Joseph’s Catholic Primary School Headteacher: Mrs. K Husain Deputy Headteacher: Dr. N Fernandes Viana Jesus said: ‘I have come that they may have life and have it to the full’. Dear Parents, 2nd November 2018 Thank you to all the parents who attended the Funding Update meetings in school on Tuesday. The school has been one of the lowest funded primary schools in Westminster for several years. However, the recent funding changes because of the new National Funding Formula, the fall in primary age children in Westminster in recent years and the increased costs faced by all schools have fundamentally changed the financial position of the school. To maintain the current enriched curriculum and to provide the best education for the children that we can, we rely on your financial help and ask for. Your financial support currently takes two forms. Firstly, the fundraising of the School Association, this is still very strong: in 2017/18 they raised approximately £130,000. For this we are grateful, and long may it continue. Secondly, contributions to the Governors’ Fund. This has dropped by over 40% in recent years. Considering the recent funding changes and costs pressures we are asking all parents to consider donating monthly to the Governors’ fund or increase the amount they currently donate. Monthly contributions will provide Governors’ with a certainty to plan. We are looking to target annual contributions of £200,000 to the fund which is a £160,000 increase from the current level. I must stress that any contributions are voluntary, and all funds received are used for the benefit of all the children at the school.
    [Show full text]
  • Johnson 1 C. Johnson: Social Contract And
    C. Johnson: Social Contract and Energy in Pimlico ORIGINAL ARTICLE District heating as heterotopia: Tracing the social contract through domestic energy infrastructure in Pimlico, London Charlotte Johnson UCL Institute for Sustainable Resources, University College London, London, WC1H 0NN, UK Corresponding author: Charlotte Johnson; e-mail: [email protected] The Pimlico District Heating Undertaking (PDHU) was London’s first attempt at neighborhood heating. Built in the 1950s to supply landmark social housing project Churchill Gardens, the district heating system sent heat from nearby Battersea power station into the radiators of the housing estate. The network is a rare example in the United Kingdom, where, unlike other European states, district heating did not become widespread. Today the heating system supplies more than 3,000 homes in the London Borough of Westminster, having survived the closure of the power station and the privatization of the housing estate it supplies. Therefore, this article argues, the neighborhood can be understood as a heterotopia, a site of an alternative sociotechnical order. This concept is used to understand the layers of economic, political, and technological rationalities that have supported PDHU and to question how it has survived radical changes in housing and energy policy in the United Kingdom. This lens allows us to see the tension between the urban planning and engineering perspective, which celebrates this Johnson 1 system as a future-oriented “experiment,” and the reality of managing and using the system on the estate. The article analyzes this technology-enabled standard of living as a social contract between state and citizen, suggesting a way to analyze contemporary questions of district energy.
    [Show full text]
  • Pimlico Sw1 16697
    PIMLICO SW1 16,697 - 52,442 Sq Ft Refurbished Offices to Let A LANDMARK PIMLICO OFFICE BUILDING One Drummond Gate is a contemporary office building with a recently refurbished high quality reception. The building totals 108,527 sq ft (10,083 Sq M) arranged over Lower Ground to Fourth floors, we currently have 52,442 sq ft of available office accommodation. SPECIFICATION VAV air-conditioning / fan coil on ground floor Male, female & DDA WCs Part raised floor Metal tiled suspended acoustic ceiling 3 x16 passenger lifts Goods lift 24 hour access Cycle storage Car parking (by separate arrangement) Excellent natural light & impressive views over London (3rd & 4th floors) Refurbished reception area Fourth Floor THE AVAILABLE ACCOMMODATION IS OVER THE GROUND, THIRD AND FOURTH FLOORS The accommodation is arranged in an efficient rectangular shape, wrapped around the central atrium and lift lobby. The upper floors draw light from the central atrium and floor to ceiling windows on all sides of the floor plate. Each upper floor possesses two points of access and are partially fitted out with a number of meeting rooms, shower facilities and the remaining as open plan space. The large windows and views across London make the upper floors a very attractive prospect to any incoming occupier looking for highly productive and inspiring space for all their staff. TYPICAL UPPER FLOOR 17,941 SQ FT / 1,667 SQ M Atrium ACCOMMODATION Atrium Floor Sq Ft Sq M Fourth 16,697 1,551 Third 17,941 1,667 Ground 17,804 1,654 Total 52,442 4,872 For indicative purposes only, not to scale.
    [Show full text]
  • Character Overview Westminster Has 56 Designated Conservation Areas
    Westminster’s Conservation Areas - Character Overview Westminster has 56 designated conservation areas which cover over 76% of the City. These cover a diverse range of townscapes from all periods of the City’s development and their distinctive character reflects Westminster’s differing roles at the heart of national life and government, as a business and commercial centre, and as home to diverse residential communities. A significant number are more residential areas often dominated by Georgian and Victorian terraced housing but there are also conservation areas which are focused on enclaves of later housing development, including innovative post-war housing estates. Some of the conservation areas in south Westminster are dominated by government and institutional uses and in mixed central areas such as Soho and Marylebone, it is the historic layout and the dense urban character combined with the mix of uses which creates distinctive local character. Despite its dense urban character, however, more than a third of the City is open space and our Royal Parks are also designated conservation areas. Many of Westminster’s conservation areas have a high proportion of listed buildings and some contain townscape of more than local significance. Below provides a brief summary overview of the character of each of these areas and their designation dates. The conservation area audits and other documentation listed should be referred to for more detail on individual areas. 1. Adelphi The Adelphi takes its name from the 18th Century development of residential terraces by the Adam brothers and is located immediately to the south of the Strand. The southern boundary of the conservation area is the former shoreline of the Thames.
    [Show full text]
  • Irina Porter, Uncovering Kilburn's History: Part 7
    Uncovering Kilburn’s History – Part 7 Thank you for joining me again for the final part of this Kilburn local history series. 1. New flats in Cambridge Road, opposite Granville Road Baths, c.1970. (Brent Archives online image 10127) In Part 6 we saw the major rebuilding that took place, particularly in South Kilburn, between the late 1940s and the 1970s. Many of the workers on the building sites were Irish. The new wave of Irish immigration to Northwest London, which reached its peak in the 1950s, was quickly transforming the area. As well as abundant work, Kilburn offered plenty of cheap accommodation, and a bustling High Road with cultural and eating establishments, many of them catering for the Irish population, who soon represented a majority in the area. ‘County Kilburn’ was dubbed Ireland’s 33rd county. 2. Kilburn's Irish culture – an Irish Festival poster and Kilburn Gaels hurling team. (From the internet) The Irish community, close-knit and mutually supportive, hit the headlines in the negative way in the 1970s, when Kilburn became a focal point for “the Troubles” in London. On 8 June 1974, an estimated 3,000 came out onto the streets of Kilburn for the funeral procession of Provisional IRA member Michael Gaughan. An Irishman, who had lived in Kilburn, Gaughan was imprisoned for an armed bank robbery in 1971 and in 1974 died as the result a hunger strike. Gaughan’s coffin, accompanied by an IRA guard of honour, was taken from the Crown at Cricklewood through Kilburn to the Catholic Church of the Sacred Heart in Quex Road, before being flown to Dublin for another ceremony and funeral.
    [Show full text]
  • Central London Bus and Walking Map Key Bus Routes in Central London
    General A3 Leaflet v2 23/07/2015 10:49 Page 1 Transport for London Central London bus and walking map Key bus routes in central London Stoke West 139 24 C2 390 43 Hampstead to Hampstead Heath to Parliament to Archway to Newington Ways to pay 23 Hill Fields Friern 73 Westbourne Barnet Newington Kentish Green Dalston Clapton Park Abbey Road Camden Lock Pond Market Town York Way Junction The Zoo Agar Grove Caledonian Buses do not accept cash. Please use Road Mildmay Hackney 38 Camden Park Central your contactless debit or credit card Ladbroke Grove ZSL Camden Town Road SainsburyÕs LordÕs Cricket London Ground Zoo Essex Road or Oyster. Contactless is the same fare Lisson Grove Albany Street for The Zoo Mornington 274 Islington Angel as Oyster. Ladbroke Grove Sherlock London Holmes RegentÕs Park Crescent Canal Museum Museum You can top up your Oyster pay as Westbourne Grove Madame St John KingÕs TussaudÕs Street Bethnal 8 to Bow you go credit or buy Travelcards and Euston Cross SadlerÕs Wells Old Street Church 205 Telecom Theatre Green bus & tram passes at around 4,000 Marylebone Tower 14 Charles Dickens Old Ford Paddington Museum shops across London. For the locations Great Warren Street 10 Barbican Shoreditch 453 74 Baker Street and and Euston Square St Pancras Portland International 59 Centre High Street of these, please visit Gloucester Place Street Edgware Road Moorgate 11 PollockÕs 188 TheobaldÕs 23 tfl.gov.uk/ticketstopfinder Toy Museum 159 Russell Road Marble Museum Goodge Street Square For live travel updates, follow us on Arch British
    [Show full text]
  • Draft Planning Brief for City of Westminster College, Paddington Green, W2
    Draft Planning Brief for City of Westminster College, Paddington Green, W2 City of Westminster College, Paddington Centre, 25 Paddington Green, London W2 draft planning brief consultation draft 16 December 2004 Approved for consultation purposes Version; Date: Status: 1 Draft Planning Brief for City of Westminster College, Paddington Green, W2 Document title: Draft Planning Brief for City of Westminster College, Paddington Centre, 25 Paddington Green, London W2 1NB Version: 1 Date: 16 December 2004 Status: draft for public consultation Produced by: City Planning Group City of Westminster City Hall, 64 Victoria Street London SW1E 6Qp Contact Alice Leach email [email protected] 020 7641 2286 Fax: 020 7641 8535 2 Draft Planning Brief for City of Westminster College, Paddington Green, W2 Table of Contents 1 Executive Summary 5 2 Introduction 5 Purpose of the planning brief 5 3 Policy Context 6 4 The Site 7 5 Surroundings 7 6 Relevant Planning History 8 Relevant Planning History – adjacent sites 9 West End Green Site 9 7 UDP Policy Designations 9 8 Land Uses 9 Loss of a community facility 9 Housing 10 Provision of a community facility 11 Retail Uses 11 9 High Buildings 11 10 Urban Design 11 Relationship to adjacent conservation areas 11 Height, scale and form 12 Pedestrian links 12 11 Amenity Considerations 13 12 Servicing, Waste and Recycling Storage 13 13 Transport 13 14 Sustainable Buildings 14 15 Planning Benefit 15 16 Form of application 15 17 Contacts 16 Appendix 1 17 Planning Obligations 17 Appendix 2 19 Bibliography / Other Relevant Documents 19 Appendix 3 21 St Mary’s Church listed building description, and associated structures around Paddington Green 21 Children’s Hospital Paddington Green listed building description.
    [Show full text]
  • Commissioning Case Study Co-Production of Early Years Services in Queen’S Park
    Commissioning case study Co-production of early years services in Queen’s Park co-design whole-systems model cost–benefit analysis community champions early years services of the community with the intention of reversing generations of state dependency and of reforming The headlines hyper-local public and community services. A community meeting was held to discuss priorities and residents raised particular concerns about gang l Westminster City Council’s children’s services violence and more broadly about the quality and department and Central London Community Health availability of services and support for children and are committed to a neighbourhood-based co-design young people. Early years was chosen by residents of children’s centre services. to be the focus of the neighbourhood community budget pilot. It was estimated that in the four years l The neighbourhood community budget pilot that would follow the launch of the pilot around one has provided an opportunity to develop and test thousand new children would be born in the Queen’s an integrated, whole-systems model for the delivery Park ward. The ambition for the community was for of early years services, with residents and partner these children to benefit from a progressive reduction agencies working together in new ways. of risk in their later years. l The pace of change within different organisations When deciding on the early years focus, residents represented on a partnership is not consistent made the point that they were concerned not solely and this has to be taken into account when with money but also with the way in which the establishing a timeline for co-designing and design of services took place largely unseen by the co-commissioning services.
    [Show full text]
  • London's Last Great Plague
    London's last great plague [Wellcome Library, London] Vanessa Harding, Birkbeck London Weekly Bill of Mortality, 21-28 February 1664/5 [Wellcome Library, London] Deaths by parish, grouped into: ‘the 97 parishes within the walls’ __________ ‘the 16 parishes without the walls, and the pesthouse’ __________ ‘the 12 out parishes in Middlesex and Surry’ ________ ‘the 5 parishes in the city and liberties of Westminster’ London and the Bills of Mortality A: the 97 parishes within the walls B: the 16 parishes outside the walls but partly or wholly within the City's jurisdiction C: the 10 (later 12) outparishes in Middlesex and Surrey D: the Westminster parishes Verso of London Weekly Bill of Mortality, 21-28 February 1664/5 [Wellcome Library, London] ‘The Diseases and Casualties this Week’, together with the total Christenings and Burials by gender, the decrease in burials over the preceding week, the number of parishes infected with or clear of the plague, and the statutory weight of a penny and halfpenny loaf of bread. [I] observed that most of them who constantly took in the weekly Bills of Mortality, made little other use of them, then to look at the foot, how the Burials increase, or decrease; And, among the Casualties, what had happened rare, and extraordinary in the week currant; so as they might take the same as a text to talk upon, in the next Company; and withall, in the Plague-time, how the Sickness increased, or decreased, that so the Rich might judge of the necessity of their removall, and Trades-men might conjecture what doings they were like to have in their respective dealings: John Graunt, Natural and Political Observations on the Bills of Mortality (1662) 27 July.
    [Show full text]
  • St John's Wood
    St John’s Wood Area Guide St John’s Wood lies within the City of Westminster in the North West London. Once part of the Great Middlesex Forest, the area was one of the first London suburbs to be developed from the early 19th century onwards, mainly with low density “villa” type housing. St. John’s Wood was once part of the Great Forest of Middlesex, its name derived from its mediaeval owners, the Knights of the Order of St John of Jerusalem. After the Reformation and the Dissolution of monastic orders, St John’s Wood became Crown land, and Henry VIII established Royal Hunting Grounds in what became known as Marylebone Park, to the north of which lay St John’s Wood. The area remained in agricultural use until the end of the eighteenth century, when plans for residential development first appeared. Building began in 1809 in Alpha Road, on the southern boundary of St John’s Wood. One of the first London suburbs to be developed, it was a unique pattern of development and mainly planned with a large amount of low density, semi-detached villas, abandoning the familiar terraced house. Although many of the original houses and gardens disappeared during the twentieth century, through bomb damage and the building of new roads, railways and schools, much of the original character of the area remains. In the 1960s, most of St John’s Wood was designated a Conservation Area and its houses listed by English Heritage. It remains a highly desirable residential location, and one of the most expensive areas of London.
    [Show full text]
  • Westminster Abbey
    Westminster Abbey Civic Service attended in Civic State by The Lord Mayor of Westminster Councillor Audrey Lewis and Councillors of the City of Westminster Sunday 6 th July 2014 11.00 am THE CITY OF WESTMINSTER Westminster first achieved the status of a city in 1540 when, for only ten years, it became a bishopric. Its first recorded civic administration dates from 1585, in the reign of Queen Elizabeth I, when an Act authorised the establishment of a Court of Burgesses ‘for the good government of the City of Westminster’. While Queen Elizabeth I was creating mayors elsewhere in England, she was concerned that a mayor in Westminster might challenge the authority of the monarch in her own capital city, and she therefore appointed instead the High Steward of Westminster Abbey as Chairman of her newly created Court of Burgesses. The first High Steward to chair the new Court of Burgesses was the Queen’s First Minister, William Cecil, Lord Burleigh. The Court of Burgesses was an administrative body which dealt with public health and morality, planning permissions, the prevention and punishment of crime, and the regulation of weights and measures. It comprised twelve Burgesses appointed by the Dean—one for each ward. However, when the London Government Act of 1899 created twenty-eight Metropolitan Borough Councils, each having an elected Mayor, Aldermen, and Councillors, the authority of the Dean and the High Steward in secular affairs ceased. The last High Steward who was also effectively Mayor was Lord Salisbury, who was then also Prime Minister. The Duke of Norfolk was the first Mayor of Westminster.
    [Show full text]