The new building sets new standards in sustainable design, set to bring about dramatic changes in the way that energy-hungry data centers are designed and built in the future. Incorporating a raft of environmental measures that achieve maximum sustainability with no compromise to operation or reliability, the building proves that this energy hungry building sector can be built to perform at optimum levels of energy efficiency and environmental consciousness.
From an aesthetic perspective, the design of the complex is a combination of intelligently designed inhabited spaces and extensive green planes. However, the most radical green innovations are mostly hidden. The Frankfurt Centre will use only 30% of the power required for services that a conventional data centre would utilize, only 40% of the heating energy. This included a reduction of energy use for the infrastructure of the data center of 72% and a reduction of water consumption of 30% through the usage of innovative reverse osmosis treatment saves almost 36 million liters of water per year.
Citigroup’s new data center outwardly showcases its green credentials through the extensive use of recycled and locally sourced materials and alternating green facades (
- a green wall on one side of the complex and
- a fenestrated window panel on the other).
The facility is topped off by a vegetated green roof that actively keeps the building cooler in the summer and warmer in the winter while absorbing rainwater. Plant topology was carefully selected to enhance the operational energy efficiency of the building.
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