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PBC Becomes the First Building in India to Get NABERS Certified

Monday, May 18th, 2015

National Australian Built Environment Rating System (NABERS) Announces Their First International Certification in India and outside Australia

NABERS Recognizes Paharpur Business Centre’s indoor air environment quality management for occupants’ health and well-being

 Melbourne based company CETEC Pty Ltd, a technical risk management consultancy focusing on occupational health and safety, environmental consulting, awarded  Paharpur Business Centre (PBC), a USGBC LEED (EB) Platinum Certified and BEE 5 Star rated, green office building, located in Nehru Place Greens, New Delhi with the first-ever certification under the National Australian Built Environment Rating System (NABERS).

 

NABERS is a performance-based rating system for existing buildings, which rated the Paharpur Business Centre based on its measured operational impact on the environment on several parameters including indoor air quality, ventilation and levels of pollutants.

Paharpur Business Centre is India’s first retrofit building to earn top rating for its green space and its indoor air quality conforms to American Society of Heating, Refrigerating, and Air-Conditioning Engineers (ASHRAE) World Health Organizations (WHO) standards.

 

Announcing the first international certification for NABERS, Dr. Vyt Garnys, Managing Director, CETEC Pty Ltd said, “ PBC qualified NABERS parameters by using unique technologies in combination with best practice and extremely high aspirational targets set by the owners.

PBC addressed achievement of high Indoor Environment Quality by attending to control all pollutants such as fine particles, CO2 and enhancement of oxygen levels by the use of plants and mechanical practices.

The lighting levels, noise and comfort parameters were controlled by continous recording and attention to data of the building’s operation. The outstanding feature of the NABERS rating was the exceptionally high ‘occupant-satisfaction score’. This is one of the highest score that has been achieved by the Australian NABERS protocol that we have measured so far. Satisfied tenants are gold for their own business as well as for PBC’s tenants’ retention. Finally, this high tenant satisfaction also indicates high occupant productivity which is vital for India’s recovery.”

Mr. Peter Varghese AO, Secretary of the Department of Foreign Affairs & Trade, Australia Government say, “Being performance based, a NABERS Indoor Environment rating provides proof that the technologies which have been implemented at PBC have been commissioned well, are being managed well, and are providing tangible benefits to the building’s occupants in the form of a more comfortable and healthy workplace.

 

This rating shows that the team at PBC understands that operating a truly sustainable building means not just minimizing its impact on the environment, but also maximising the wellbeing of the people who occupy it. The investments that have been made into making this a high performance building will provide widespread returns, as healthy, comfortable occupants become more productive employees and more energized citizens.”

 

Mr. Kamal Meattle, CEO Paharpur Business Centre and Software Technology Incubator Park, added          “Given that Delhi’s air is practically unfit for breathing, it is great that we have a third party verification of good air quality at PBC – for wellness and productivity of our occupants. People working in buildings need to keep well and it is a well known fact that indoor air is 10 times more polluted than outside or ambient air. What does one do, when the ambient air is itself unacceptable?

 

PBC has found solutions for it. We grow fresh air with the help of more than 1,200 air purifying plants that not only detoxify the indoor air but also enrich it with oxygen.

 

PBC cares for its occupants – their Wellness. This goes beyond its USGBC LEED Platinum and BEE 5 star rating. We have achieved a 4 star rating for our Indoor Environment Quality, in NABERS’ assessment. We hope to make it to a 5 star rating in the next certification after a year.

 

PBC’s occupant-centric approach and the efforts towards enhanced Human Experience has been summarized well by Mr. Varghese.”

 

Barun Aggarwal, Director, Breathe EasyTM, IAQ Division of PBC said, “We are delighted to be the first recipient of NABERS Certification outside Australia. It reiterates our commitment to Occupants’ Health & Wellbeing in a bult environment by ensuring excellent Indoor Environment Quality.

Air Quality has now started gaining momentum in India. It is one of the critical components of Indoor Environment Quality. PBC, now being certified with a clear International certification, paves the way for others to replicate healthy indoor environment at homes and offices.”

 

CETEC Pty Ltd focuses on reducing risk and providing solutions. CETEC’s scientific and technical approach to IEQ (Facility Ecology™) makes them a national leader in this field. CETEC has been a long term and firm advocate of improving occupant’s satisfaction and wellbeing, corporate productivity, and facility efficiency through the development and use of the National Australian Built Environment Rating Scheme (NABERS) for Office Indoor Environment.

CETEC was engaged by Breathe Easy to conduct an Indoor Environment Quality (IEQ) Study of their office building -PBC and because of their holistic approach, they also elected PBC to apply for the NABERS certification.

***

 

 

About NABERS

NABERS

 

National Australian Built Environment Rating System

BUILT ON PERFORMANCE.

Welcome to NABERS.

NABERS is a national rating system that measures the environmental performance of Australian buildings, tenancies and homes. Put simply, NABERS measures the energy efficiency, water usage, waste management and indoor environment quality of a building or tenancy and its impact on the environment.

It does this by using measured and verified performance information, such as utility bills, and converting them into an easy to understand star rating scale from one to six stars. For example, a 6 star rating demonstrates market-leading performance, while a 1 star rating means the building or tenancy has considerable scope for improvement.

For over ten years, NABERS has helped property owners, managers and tenants across Australia to improve their sustainability performance, reaping financial benefits and building their reputation.

If you’re new to sustainability, this website will help you to understand NABERS, what it measures, what it delivers and how to get started. You’ll also be able to read how others have used NABERS to advance their sustainability goals.

NABERS is managed nationally by the NSW Office of Environment and Heritage, on behalf of Commonwealth, state and territory governments.

 

About Paharpur Business Centre

Located in one of the largest and busiest business districts of South Delhi – Nehru Place, New Delhi, Paharpur Business Centre (PBC) is a green micro, small and medium enterprise (mSME) in the services and real estate sector that offers instant, managed & serviced Office Solutions on a “plug & play” basis in mountain fresh air ambience. Built to compulsory Government Design, it is the first retrofit building in India that is USGBC LEED Platinum EB Certified (under O & M category) in 2010 and a BEE 5star rated building with an annual energy hourly energy rating (AAhEPI) of 28 Wh/ hr/ sqm.

Currently PBC operates at 20 Wh/hr/sqm and the endeavour is to bring it down to 15 Wh/hr/sqm.

PBC and its suite of 27 support services are certified to ISO 9001, 14001, 22000, 50001; OHSAS 18001; SA 8000, and Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (under Act 2006).

Paharpur Business Centre is also a signatory to the United Nations Global Compact (UNGC) and Women’s Empowerment Principles (WEP). PBC is the only mSME among the 6 signatories to WEP from India.

Care for the environment has been an intrinsic part of PBC’s business strategy. Since inception, its USP, “Indoor Air Quality” (IAQ) is a proof of it. PBC grows its own fresh air with the help of over 1200 air purifying plants. PBC has a fresh-air treatment plant/ air washer in the Green House at the rooftop which is integrated with our IAQ system. IAQ at PBC conforms to American Society of Heating, Refrigerating, and Air-Conditioning Engineers (ASHRAE) and World Health Organization (WHO) standards. It helps the occupants in the building to have better functioning lungs; a fresher mind; reduced number of sick days and 15-20 per cent higher productivity.

IAQ system adds value to the human experience in the building.

PBC was awarded by ET Now for Best Workplace, in February 2013.

PBC has also received special commendation from CoreNet Global in April 2013, for Industry Excellence, Economic Development and Sustainable Leadership. PBC has also been recognized for energy management practices and was presented the 15th CII National Award for Excellence in Energy Management in October 2014.

 

PBC has been a leading provider of office facilities and services to corporate houses as well as Fortune 500 companies planning a foray into the Indian marketplace, for nearly two decades now.

 

To know more, please visit the website: www.pbcnet.com and/or follow PBC on LinkedIn, Twitter and Facebook.

 

For Media Queries Contact:

Smruti S Samantray

Dy. Manager, Corporate Communications

Paharpur Business Centre

T: +91-11-4120 7171/ 7018

M: 9711215910

5 Ways To Promote Your Office Space

Tuesday, December 23rd, 2014

Competition in every kind of trade has become very tough. One of the reasons is the new businesses getting added to the market on a daily basis. For the obvious reasons like up-scaling the brand value, establishing the brand name and more, every business requires a commercial space. Needless to say, office space is quite much in demand.

If you are a part of a business centre or a company that provides office space, then here are some tips that you may like to use for promoting it:

  1. Define your target group. You may categorize it as per trades or sectors that you want to focus on. If you want to set a standard then, it is always good to start with a limited set of target groups/areas.
  2. It is very difficult to find out a business-prospective office space in Delhi, Mumbai, Kolkata, Bangalore, Chennai and Hyderabad is quite a challenge from the seekers’ perspective. From the office space providers’ perspective, the challenge is to make its brand stand out in the market which would not be possible without promoting it strategically. If you keep an approach of making companies rely on you for finding out and providing a good commercial space that adds value to their business prospect then your marketing strategy would click.
  3. If you are present in metro cities, then you must draw the advantage of the city’s nature and especially of the location. Talk about the benefits of your location. Your brochure should contain the names of hotels and restaurants, hospitals, coffee houses etc in that particular locality or in the neighbourhood. A business centre which provides office space on rent in New Delhi, and is based in Nehru Place can talk about the advantages of being in South Delhi.
  4. You must use the unique feature of your company in majority of your advertisement and promotional campaigns. To make your brands settled in the minds of your TGs, you need to use your USP judiciously. There is a business centre which provides office space in South Delhi, promotes its USP, ‘mountain-fresh ambience’ in all its promotional campaigns. People feel good about the business centre that offers you to work in a space which lets them breathe clean and fresh air in the world’s most polluted city, Delhi. The conviction effect of the campaign is that people tend to get inclined towards its services for they know that the company is concerned for their health and wellness.
  5. With the whole world taking digital turns, you must put in efforts to increase your online presence. Work on the search engine ranking, social media promotion and online advertisement activities. This will don a lot of business advantage to your company. Consult a online marketing strategists. They will help you out.

Climate change problem

Tuesday, March 16th, 2010

The Building that Can Change the World and Solve the World’s Biggest Climate Change Problem
by Don Debelle

When doctors told Kamal Meattle that his lung capacity had dropped to 70%, and it was Delhi’s air that was killing him, he had two choices: leave friends, family and the life he had built for more than five decades, and move to New Zealand or Canada – or find a solution. An MIT and Sloan School of Management graduate, Kamal was on the Board of Governors of India’s premier technology institute – IIT New Delhi, and now it was payback time. “Where was the solution? Who had been thinking about and researching on air purity,” he asked. Together, Kamal and a team from IIT began the search for a solution. “One place we discovered was NASA,” he says. In their research for off planet colonies, NASA had been experimenting on using plants to “grow” fresh air, but their research was classified. Creating fresh air classified? you ask. So it seems, but Kamal recalls, “We knew that we had found an idea worth exploring.

The thought of using plants to ‘grow’ fresh air was a green and healthy solution – something that should have been so obvious and intuitive, but had been overlooked completely by all but a very few researchers.” They were onto something, and that it was leading edge research made it all the more fascinating to Kamal.

Kamal recalls that “What we eventually found, through our own (Paharpur Business Centre) research [how did they find this?] was three common and easily grown house plants that can grow all the fresh air that is needed indoors”:
· “The Living Room Plant” Areca Palm (Chrysalidocarpis lutescens) which converts CO2 to oxygen during the day.
· “The Bedroom Plant” Mother-in-law’s Tongue (Sansevieria trifasciata) which does the same at night.
· “The Specialist Plant” the Money Plant (Epipremnum aureum) that absorbs formaldehydes and volatile chemicals from the air.

[consider something about how Kamal implemented these ideas in his building as an intro the following paragraph]
He runs off figures from recent studies in the office building that he manages, Paharpur Business Centre (PBC), in the heart of New Delhi, “when compared to other Delhi buildings, these plants lower eye irritation by 52%, respiratory symptoms by 34%, headaches by 12%, lung impairment by 24% and asthma by 9%. They also found a 42% probability of increasing blood oxygen by 1%. All this has led to 20% higher productivity and has also reduced energy requirements by 15%, because less outdoor ‘fresh air’ needs to be cycled into the building.” The improved air quality is immediately noticeable; you feel like you are at a hill station the moment you enter the building.

Their research soon began to attract the interest of others, and hearing of him, Chris Anderson at TED invited Kamal to address the TED Conference and bring his ideas on how to grow fresh air to the world.

Kamal is a big thinker. He is not intimidated by the challenges that face him; rather, he seems to draw inspiration from them. There are many who talk about the environment and its problems, but Kamal is really doing something. He quotes and lives the motto of Mahatma Gandhi: “Be the change you want to see in the world.”

The Earth’s climate is a complex, non-linear system, and the exact details will always be debated, but the trend is real, observable, and quickly moving towards critical tipping points. We are presently approaching many interconnected tipping points, which once crossed will be irreversible and where each one will feed into the next. Perhaps the most important and critical of these are: Instead of this para we suggest – Climate Change is real and is happening over time and humans are contributing to it, perhaps the most important and critical evidences are as under:
· The melting of the polar ice cap. Large ice sheets act like gigantic mirrors, reflecting sunlight back into the cosmos. As sea-ice melts, it exposes a much darker ocean surface, which absorbs more radiation – amplifying the warming. It is expected that this will lead to far-reaching changes in ocean circulation and climate patterns across the whole Northern Hemisphere.
· The thawing of the permafrost in northern Canada and Russia which holds an estimated 500 gigatons of carbon that is being released into the atmosphere as methane, a greenhouse gas 20 times more potent than carbon dioxide.
· The oceans act as the planet’s main carbon sink and currently absorb over 40 % of the CO2 emitted by human activity. As the planet warms so to do the oceans, losing their ability to absorb CO2. Once they become saturated and no longer absorb CO2, planet will warm even more quickly. This will accelerate the warming of the oceans, which will then begin to give up the CO2 that they have sequestered for centuries.

Geo-engineering will not solve the problem; it will only buy us time and allow us to make the necessary changes. If those changes are not made, and these tipping points are crossed, what scientists fear is that runaway global warming could be unleashed and that the planet will no longer be able to support life as we know it. It is impossible to overstate the direst implications of what this will mean.

Kamal states, “I knew we had only a few decades to find solutions to these problems, and I began looking for ways to help. Inspired by what I had discovered in growing fresh air with plants, I began retrofitting PBC with green, healthy, energy efficient technologies. As a result, PBC is now targeting LEED EB O&M Platinum Certification by mid of 2010. PBC became a study in the best technologies available, and when a UNEP press release on the energy footprint of buildings caught my attention, my interest in green building technologies grew into the solution I had been looking for.” PBC posts its daily indoor air quality readings / data on its website

Buildings account for 50% of all Green House Gas emissions, and the building sector makes up roughly 40% of global energy use. According to the UNEP press release, “building sector world-wide could deliver emission reductions of 1.8 billion tonnes of C02. A more aggressive energy efficiency policy might deliver over two billion tonnes, or close to three times the amount scheduled to be reduced under the Kyoto Protocol.”

Kamal comments, “This presented a real opportunity to make a difference. I decided that if we could build the world’s greenest, most energy efficient building, and showcase the technologies used, it would serve as an example on which all future buildings could be modeled.” And so the concept for GreenSpaces began to take shape. “I again called on friends and colleagues from around the world to help,” says Kamal, and before long he had attracted the attention of international organizations, businesses and government laboratories ready to partner with him in his project. These included: the OECD; the Asia-Pacific Partnership on Clean Development and Climate (APP) an international non-treaty agreement among Australia, Canada, India, Japan, the China, South Korea, and the US; as well as a number of US government energy research laboratories, IBM, GE and others.

He maintains, “It is no exaggeration to say that this will be the world’s greenest and most energy efficient commercial / office building over a million square feet. When built, GreenSpaces will showcase the world’s best and most energy efficient technologies and demonstrate that the energy footprint of buildings can be economically reduced from 40% to 10%, with today’s proven technologies.” And, this will not be achieved at a cost to quality of life. Rather, using Kamal’s special plants to grow fresh air in the new building, as well as other innovations he has discovered, will put GreenSpaces in a class by itself. Not only will it be one of the healthiest buildings in the world, but the improved energy efficiencies brought about by the use of plants and other innovative energy efficient technologies will mean that GreenSpaces will be at least 15%(To check with Mr. Meattle if its 15% or more) more energy efficient than the newly constructed Bank of America Tower, New York, USA.

Kamal says, “One of our goals in GreenSpaces has been to prove that this can be done in a way that is financially viable. It is all but meaningless to build this building if costs are not controlled.” Even though the projected cost of GreenSpaces is 263 million US $, with an incremental cost of 58% compared to an “A” class commercial building. The energy efficiencies achieved will mean that additional costs will be paid back in six years.

Kamal says, “Even though we have chosen the best technologies known to us, there are certainly technologies which we haven’t discovered that could improve on energy efficiencies or reduce costs further.” But what are those technologies? Where are they? How would you find them? These questions seemed unanswerable, until a small Canadian internet startup called Blue-Green Spaces which had been studying the use of collaborative networks for the environmental community approached him. Kamal recognized that this might be the opportunity he was looking for to uncover those new and hitherto, unknown technologies.

Initially inspired by the collaborative spirit that had made Wikipedia a reality, Blue-Green Spaces was at the leading edge of what was being made possible by the Web 2.0 internet. As recently as two years ago, Wikipedia had only 3 fulltime employees, and even now it numbers only around 20. Wikipedia, the encyclopedia, owes its existence to the real genius of its founder, Jimmy Wales, in creating a loyal, dedicated online core community of around 16,000 core users. It is a global collaborative volunteer effort that administers, monitors and cares for the Wikipedia project with love and dedication.

The question they had asked themselves at Blue-Green Spaces was this: why is it, if people are this dedicated to an encycleopedia, that something like this has not happened in the environmental community? Everywhere you go, you encounter a rising frustration in people who want to help, who want to really do something, to make a difference that matters, but who find no opportunity to truly make a difference on a scale that they feel would be meaningful. The answer to this problem was at the core of what Blue-Green Spaces had been studying.

Kamal’s entrepreneurial spirit saw an opportunity and together they launched the GreenSpaces Challenge. The idea was to invite people from across the Globe to contribute innovative, energy efficient and cost effective ideas, products and services. This is a platform for people to join in and make a difference to the way buildings will be built in future.