AECOM fast-tracks Green School South Africa in Paarl for the 2021 school year

17 June 2021
Infrastructure consulting firm AECOM enabled Green School South Africa in the Drakenstein Valley near Paarl in the Western Cape to be fast-tracked so it could open on time for the 2021 school year. AECOM’s long-lead procurement scheduling provided the necessary planning tool to enable the team to monitor and track procurement of the specialised construction packages.
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application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document iconAECOM fast-tracks Green School South Africa in Paarl for the 2021 school year_approved29.66 KBDownload
PreviewApart from the buildings, extensive landscaping had to be completed, together with a sports field, road network and security fen407.08 KBDownload
PreviewBasic quantity surveying principles were applied, such as reviewing the efficiency ratios of wallfloor areas.485.18 KBDownload
PreviewFeng shui principles were incorporated to harness positive energies within the buildings.475.87 KBDownload
PreviewHerman Berry (PrQS)454.67 KBDownload
PreviewThe gross construction area of 2 973 m2 consists of 16 classrooms split between kindergarten and primary school.459.21 KBDownload
PreviewThe school is regenerative in terms of energy, producing 105% of its own electricity consumption.404.31 KBDownload

Appointed in June 2019, there was considerable pressure to have the school open and operational, reports Herman Berry (PrQS), Executive, Programme, Cost, Consultancy – Africa, AECOM. A Head of School and teaching staff were appointed and children accepted, which meant that the opening date was non-negotiable. However, careful planning, teamwork and sheer hard work meant that Green School South Africa was ready to welcome learners by 15 February 2021.

The school is a passion project for its founders, Herman and Alba Brandt, whose children attended Green School Bali in 2017. Their extraordinary educational experience inspired the establishment of Green School South Africa. The personal significance of the project, a school for their own children and children from their community, was a driving force throughout the project.

The family had a personal touch in every aspect, which meant that managing expectations throughout was critical. The Covid-19 pandemic impacted progress significantly, with construction halted on 27 March 2020 and only resuming on-site on 1 June 2020. “This added a full two-month delay to an already congested programme,” reveals Berry.

When the hard lockdown commenced, no one could foresee how long it would be before construction could resume. As time passed, the team became increasingly concerned about the construction timeline, as well as the probable impact of global supply chain constraints on availability and price escalations of all critical materials.

To address these risks, the professional team redesigned many of the buildings to enable reduced construction times (for instance, all classrooms were planned as rammed earth buildings, but in lockdown this was changed to locally manufactured bricks) and tendered and finalised the procurement of all critical materials such as glass, steel, aluminium and the security system, etc.

“We even managed to manufacture the custom-made roof trusses for all of the classrooms during lockdown Level 4, adopting a modular concept to increase on-site efficiency,” adds Berry. Critical decisions also had to be taken on how the school could be operational while still finishing some buildings after it had opened.

What is Green School South Africa, and how is it ‘green’?

Green School South Africa’s mission is to educate for sustainability, so it has an extremely strong focus on sustainability in every component of the school. This includes design, construction and operation, but also extends to the curriculum and the way in which this is taught.

The school opened with an initial intake of 120 learners from kindergarten to Grade 8, and will add a grade so it caters for kindergarten to Grade 12 by 2025. The gross construction area of 2 973 m2 consists of 16 classrooms split between kindergarten and primary school, the Sangkep Hall (Balinese for ‘gathering place’) and the Heart of School area, complete with dining hall, kitchen, servery, library, art and music studios and ablution facilities.

Apart from the buildings, extensive landscaping had to be completed, together with a sports field, road network and security fence. From a design and construction perspective, the Living Building Challenge (LBC) was proposed by Terramanzi, the sustainability consultant. The LBC is an incredibly rigorous standard that requires a project to be regenerative and not just have a zero-carbon footprint. The fact that the site is situated outside the urban edge and far from public infrastructure services meant it had to generate its own electricity, purity its own water and treat its own waste water.

Some sustainability highlights of the school are:

  • It is regenerative in terms of energy, producing 105% of its own electricity consumption, thus giving back to the grid and not taking from it.
  • It is regenerative in terms water, using less water than what the site naturally gets per year from rainfall – hence it gives back more to the river and groundwater aquifers than it takes from it.
  • It is a zero waste-to-landfill site, also taking in waste from neighbours and the community so as to have a net positive impact on waste to landfill.
  • The construction process had to ensure that no materials on-site included any Red List ingredients, and also that the manufacturing process of all materials did not use any of these items;
  • Endemic flora was re-established in the gardens, thereby contributing positively to the biodiversity of not just the site, but the entire area, with so many different types of bees, butterflies and seed-spreading; and
  • It incorporated vegetable gardens, fruit forests, medicinal gardens and herbal corridors in the campus landscape. The school day includes growing, caring for and harvesting – all with the aim of re-establishing people’s connection to the land and food.

In addition to the above, all materials were carefully selected to reduce carbon emissions. Feng shui principles were incorporated to harness positive energies within the buildings to harmonise individuals with their surrounding environment. The thermal comfort of learners and educators was very important, with the classroom orientation, heights, roof overhangs and Thermally Activated Building System (TABS) all contributing to create a comfortable indoor environment.

With the different types of material requirements, in addition to personal touches by the client, budgets remained under pressure, so AECOM drove a value engineering process with the architect and interior designer. Basic quantity surveying principles were applied, such as reviewing the efficiency ratios of wall/floor areas, reducing wall heights and oversailing roofs, advising changing materials to meet target savings and reviewing construction areas of the various buildings, etc. “We managed to guide the designers to make practical changes without altering the essence of the design in order to achieve the client’s vision,” highlights Berry.

When Green School South Africa opened its doors on 15 February 2021, the classrooms and Heart of School buildings were complete, the gardens were planted and all infrastructure components were operational. It was almost an impossible project, but showed how collective determination and hard work can change an impossible dream into a beautiful reality, points out Berry. “This project brings diversity to AECOM’s standard public education services. We hope it will be a trailblazer for similar types of private campuses in future.”

Other key projects that AECOM has been involved with was planning, designing and managing the implementation of ablution blocks and new boreholes for 367 schools within the Southern and Midlands regions of KwaZulu-Natal on behalf of the Department of Education. AECOM also has a long-term contract with Sol Plaatje University in Kimberley to provide project and programme management and commercial and procurement support services.

Professional Team

Main contractor: Energy Master Builders

Quantity surveyor and fire engineer: AECOM – Lead QS Herman Berry, QS Mathapelo Nchabeleng, Senior Mechanical Engineer and Fire Engineer Johan Jooste

Architect: GASS Architecture Studios

Lead interior designer: D12

Civil and electrical engineer: FRAME (Paarl)

Solar PV design and supply: FRAME (Paarl)

Sustainability consultant: Terramanzi

Thermal comfort design: Climetric

Landscape Architect: DDS Projects

 

Ends

Notes to the editor

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About AECOM

AECOM is the world’s trusted infrastructure consulting firm, delivering professional services throughout the project lifecycle – from planning, design and engineering to programme and construction management. On projects spanning transportation, buildings, water, new energy and the environment, our public- and private-sector clients trust us to solve their most complex challenges. Our teams are driven by a common purpose to deliver a better world through our unrivalled technical expertise and innovation, a culture of equity, diversity and inclusion, and a commitment to environmental, social and governance priorities. AECOM is a Fortune 500 firm and its Professional Services business had revenue of $13.2 billion in fiscal year 2020. See how we are delivering sustainable legacies for generations to come at aecom.com and @AECOM.

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