Pro Installer April 2016 - Issue 37 | Page 10

10 APRIL 2016 PRO INSTALLER PRO NEWS www.proinstaller.co.uk MODERN GLASS FAÇADES MUST BE MULTIFUNCTIONAL Energy efficiency. The glass façade of the new Festo Automation Centre has been designed as an exhaust air façade. Using electrochromic window panes, it adjusts itself automatically to the prevailing lighting conditions. A coloured view. The windows at the Merck Innovation Center in Darmstadt contain liquid crystals which switch from light to dark and back again within seconds. Multitalented. Iconic Skin, the new opaque glass façade from Seele, is doubly efficient. It has been designed as a highly heat-insulating component and, according to the manufacturer, offers good value for money. Modern, transparent and prestigious – large glass façades are very much in vogue for office complexes and industrial buildings. Yet their use only makes sense in terms of energy savings and cost effectiveness if they also have air-conditioning functions and help the energy supply. The glass industry is therefore keen to promote the development of multifunctional windows and façade elements – an area where it has already achieved numerous promising innovations. Architects and engineers are currently facing major challenges. In modern architecture there is an increasing demand for glass façades that add brightness and make the building look more prestigious. According to forecasts, as many as 1.33 billion square metres of new façades will be in place by 2021. This is roughly the area of Greater London. However, there is a problem. During the summer months, in particular, a building encased in glass needs a lot of energy to keep the inside temperature at a reasonable level. Air conditioners are dreadful energy guzzlers and largely responsible for buildings producing around 40% of all carbon emissions in the industrialised countries. Anyone planning to use glass needs to install additional functions that create both shade and air conditioning. This is all the Flagship climateactive glass. Quality control. EcontrolGlas produces electrically dimmable glass that reflects almost 90 per cent of sunlight. more important as fewer and fewer emissions are permitted under international climate protection targets. The member states of the European Union, for instance, have agreed that from 2020 any energy requirements of new buildings must be almost zero for heating, hot water, ventilation and air conditioning and that any additional energy requirements must be met by facilities within the building itself. This is where multifunctional façades can be helpful. “Even in the past many elements already formed part of the façade, such as various control functions and sun protection. In the future we will see further functions being added,” says the architect Stefan Behnisch from Stuttgart. He mentions lighting elements, heat exchangers for the production of solar heat and also mechanical ventilation and aeration elements. At the moment such façade systems are not standard. Façades are still very much seen in terms of their individual components which are developed by different manufacturers. Planners therefore need to spend a lot of time and effort combining those components. However, this will soon change, as industry and research have understood this need and are now focusing more closely on the development of integrated solutions. “All façades follow a consistent physical pattern, even when conditions keep changing, both indoors and outdoors,” says civil engineer and ar chitect Werner Sobek, head of the Institute of Lightweight Design and Construction at the University of Stuttgart. “What everyone would really like to see is a façade that can adjust itself at the flick of a switch, so that it adapts to circumstances, both inside and outside.” Builders’ database helps suppliers increase sales Small builders are the backbone of the building industry, working on tens of thousands of light commercial, new-build and residential projects and spending millions every year on building and home improvement products. Yet most local builders don’t actively advertise themselves, preferring to operate on word-of-mouth, with some having only a mobile phone number and email address. Operating under the radar, these builders are notoriously difficult for suppliers to track down. Now, Insight Data has painstakingly developed the Local Builders’ database, making it easier to promote products and services to small builders and contractors. The database contains over 23,000 building contractors and firms across the UK (with 17,800 verified email addresses). They provide a range of services, ranging from extensions and home improvements to light commercial and newbuild projects. Jade Greenhow, Operations Manager, comments: “The Local Builders Database is a powerful marketing tool which can help suppliers to drastically increase sales. “With the ability to instantly create mailing, email or telesales lists, or a follow-up list for your sales team through our online system Salestracker, it really can make a huge difference.” The database contains details of companies with a turnover of up to £5m, making it ideal for building product suppliers, builders’ merchants, timber or plumbing merchants, window or door suppliers, or service suppliers relevant to the building and construction industry. Log on to Salestracker, Insight Data’s online database software, and select builders you want to target by location and sectors, with data verified and updated in real-time. For more information, contact Insight Data on 01934 808293 or email [email protected]