Clearview National December 2018 - Issue 205 | Page 20

PROUD SPONSOR OF INDUSTRY NEWS INDUSTRYNEWS WHITEPAPER TEACHES THE CONSIDERATIONS FOR EDUCATION SETTINGS » » ASSA ABLOY UK Specification has issued a whitepaper to provide a guide to the specification of doorsets and associated hardware in nurseries, schools and universities. Entitled, ‘Specification considerations for education buildings: doors and ironmongery’ the whitepaper outlines the various relevant standards when specifying doors and ironmongery for education projects, including those relating to accessibility and usability. The paper also covers whole life costing implications and why these considerations are imperative for a successful specification, as well as discusses how architects and contractors within the education sector can contribute to a better built environment by factoring in health and wellbeing influencers. David Shields, National Specification Manager for ASSA ABLOY UK Specification and the author of the paper said: “In a procurement environment with multiple stakeholders where funding is tightly controlled, education buildings have to be flexible and future-proofed. They need to deliver cost certainty and the highest standards of specification. “This is why contractors, architects, local education authorities, facilities managers and head teachers are often pulled in very different directions when it comes to product specification for education buildings. “This whitepaper aims to provide clarification, along with practical advice and unique considerations, specifically for doorset and ironmongery specification within education settings.” With a wealth of experience supporting specifications within the education industry, ASSA ABLOY UK Specification work with architects, contractors and end users to ensure the right solution is provided for each individual project, which is then performance guaranteed for up to 20 years. This provides complete peace of mind and can save a school thousands of pounds in replacement and maintenance costs. To download the whitepaper, please visit https://bit. ly/2Qo4WOs. University project is top of class » » A MAJOR NEW UNIVERSITY Technical College in the East End of London, specialising in the creative and health industries, is making full use of the performance benefits and design flexibility offered by the Elegance 52 curtain wall system, together with Dualframe Si 75 windows, both manufactured by Sapa Building System, part of the Hydro Group. Mulberry UTC was constructed by Wates, with the London based office of Scott Brownrigg being responsible for the design input. Cheshire Architectural Aluminium, based in Cheshire, was the member of Hydro Group’s nationwide fabricator network which produced and installed the glazing package. Not only do the internally beaded Dualframe 75 Si windows achieve an overall U-value of 1.4 W/m2 K to offer very good energy saving performance, but the system’s aluminium construction is also highly significant from a sustainability perspective, and therefore contributes to the project’s BREEAM assessment. 20 » DEC 2018 » CL EARVI E W- UK . C O M In addition to being produced from bauxite, one of the planet’s most plentiful natural resources, aluminium has proved itself to be ultimately recoverable and recyclable down the decades. This fact allows Sapa to offer specifiers seeking the best BREEAM ratings the opportunity to have their door, window and curtain wall packages produced from aluminium ingots certified as 100% recycled. Elegance 52 ST curtain walling is an externally capped, thermally broken system that offers many design options through the use of different mullions and cover caps. It can deliver very good energy and acoustic performance as well as the aesthetic appearance to suit different property types, from residential and retail to education or commercial. Also stylish in design while offering multiple opening configurations, Sapa’s Dualframe 75 Si range is proving very popular in sectors such as social housing, as well as education. Not only does the uniquely designed polyamide break help it offer U-values down to 0.9 W/m2K, but Dualframe was the first aluminium system to achieve an A++ Window Energy Rating with its tilt before turn window. Additionally PAS 24 has been achieved on every style including tilt-before-turn and pivot. www.sapabuildingsystem.com