Uponor Oficinas Centrales
Avda. Leonardo da Vinci 15-17-19
Parque Empresarial La Carpetania 28906 Getafe (Madrid)
Referencias

Glenelly wine cellar, South Africa,
Stellenbosch,
South Africa

Glenelly wine cellar, South Africa

Cape Town wine farm features South Africa's first TABS project and setzs new standards to the construction industry.

Location
Stellenbosch, South Africa
Finalización
2009
Tipo de edificio
Restaurante
Product systems
Climatización Invisible
Dirección
Lelie Street,
Tipo de proyecto
Obra nueva

The Glenelly Estate is in the Idas Valley, located in Stellenbosch, on the southern slopes of the Simonsberg Mountain. Its origins date back to the seventeenth century. In 2003 May de Lencquesaing, seeing great potential in the terroir of the 128 hectares Glenelly farm, decides to invest in this young republic and acquires the estate from the Garlick family.

Internationally considered as a benchmark in climate engineering, Glenelly Estate is a winery that features South Africa's first TABS (Thermally activated building systems) project and sets new standards to the construction industry in terms of innovation and climate engineering.

Engineered application of the most current building science and technology ensures room conditions of 16°C and 75% RH year round. An integrated passive strategy uses passive night time cooling combined with an evaporative cooling tower in winter and air cooled chiller plant in summer.

The successful operation of the project has defined new boundaries for TABS as a technology and has proven it's functionality in harsh South African summer climate. A total area of 3000 m2 is activated by circulating water through the structure of the building. Thermal inertia of the 1600 tonnes of concrete controlled by sophisticated logic plays a significant role in the detailed design.

Glenelly wine cellar, South Africa

0002541
Proyectos similares

Restaurante Saddle, primer restaurante del país con certificado LEED® Gold

El restaurante Saddle abrió sus puertas en 2019 y es ya considerado uno de las experiencias gastronómicas más auténticas de Madrid.

Båtstø enters a new age

The village of Båtstø in Hallangen, Norway, is stepping boldly into a new era of green self-sufficiency. More than two hundred of its homes have now been connected to the village’s very own brand new communal wastewater treatment plant.

A treatment plant as a shared project

A small treatment plant that is shared can provide a solution for wastewater treatment in a neighbourhood or a small town, once and for all. This has been noticed, for example, in Ostrobothnia, on the west coast of Finland.

eger gal tibor winery