Edenica’s material passports

Fletcher Priest’s Edenica at 100 Fetter Lane is using material passports to track thousands of reusable components — a clear step toward circular construction on a central London site X post.

The project passported 4,817 individual building elements, covering roughly 80% of the building’s mass. (ribaj.com) Digital Product Passports were applied to four high-mass construction packages — in‑situ concrete (piles and core walls), steel columns and beams, precast planks/façade walls and the raised access floor system — and each passport was linked directly to its BIM object to create a 3D Building Passport. (circuland.co.uk) The completed development is a 12‑storey office of about 8,360 m2, delivering 3.4 m floor‑to‑ceiling heights, a 95% increase in office area over the former 1950s buildings, plus six landscaped terraces and a new pocket park. (architectsjournal.co.uk) Project reporting lists a whole‑life carbon footprint of 1,257 kgCO2e/m2 GIA for the scheme, while the delivery team says the all‑electric design cuts operational energy by roughly 50% and the building secured a WiredScore Platinum rating. (ribaj.com) Fletcher Priest will occupy the ground, mezzanine and first floors and will add its own fit‑out items into the Building Passport, and tenants have already begun moving in with elements such as luminaires included in the passported dataset. (fletcherpriest.com)

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