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The ‘Edge’: Is it the Future of Office Buildings?

A garage that recognises your car or bike, opens the gate and guides you to an available parking place or a free electric charger. An app that finds you a free desk based on your schedule and your mood/preference for standing or sitting, sociable or quiet. An app that tweaks the lighting and heating to a precise degree. This is the ‘Edge’, Deloitte’s new Amsterdam office building. It might just be the ‘smartest’ building in Europe and could be the model for “the office of the future”.

The building’s heating, lighting, in fact just about everything, is connected by a huge network of around 40,000 sensors. The architects used Philips products to hook up every light in the building to ethernet cables, so not only can they deliver wi-fi, but every piece of lighting has its own IP address and can sense when space is unoccupied, turning down heat (and light) to conserve energy.

The Edge provides Deloitte with huge amounts of data, ranging from relatively menial things such as how much different toilets are used and when the espresso machine needs refilling, to potentially more economically advantageous data. Since employees no longer need assigned desks, but are assigned space as needed, the office is able to make far more effective use of the area that it does have, while using less energy in the process.

Credit: The Edge (Deloitte)
Credit: The Edge (Deloitte)

In reality, this building represents only an initial foray into a connected office space and the potential for re-imagining workspaces. It shows what might be possible, and in a world where buildings are an expensive investment, and the average office is 30-40% empty, developing ‘smarter’ buildings brings with it some promising economics.

Source: This Frighteningly Smart Office Building Knows Exactly What You Want, When You Want It

The post The ‘Edge’: Is it the Future of Office Buildings? appeared first on Circulate.

Source: Circulate News RSS

Spate of snake attacks strike Melbourne's cats and dogs

Animal hospital reports sharp rise in bites from tiger and brown snakes as reptiles emerge from winter hibernation to exceptionally warm weather

The Victorian government has warned people to be aware of snake activity after a spate of recent incidents in which dogs and cats have been bitten by the reptiles.

Related: Thirsty snakes slither into Australian toilets as dry season bites

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Source: Guardian Environment

Coalition committee tries to balance climate science briefings by inviting denialists from thinktank

Climate scientists have been briefing Australian politicians this week. But one session did not go to plan

Australian MPs and senators have been attending briefings in Canberra this week by some of our country’s world-leading climate scientists.

The timing to bring our elected representatives up to speed is apt, given the UN climate change talks in Paris are less than six weeks away.

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Source: Guardian Environment

There is no 'moral case for coal' in Australia, just an imported PR line | Jason Wilson

The new strategy to save coal is to talk about the moral qualities of the ‘little black rock’ itself. Debunking this kind of overgrown student politics is fruitless

Australia’s coal industry is on borrowed time. In general, renewables are becoming more efficient and major coal projects are being cancelled and scaled back. This is perhaps why have heard so much from the Coalition recently about the superior moral qualities of the “little black rock”.

Related: Solar has won. Even if coal were free to burn, power stations couldn’t compete | Giles Parkinson

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Source: Guardian Environment

Women 'less likely than men to support fracking, due to instinct'

Chair of UK Onshore Oil and Gas said woman are less likely to be persuaded as they rely more on gut reaction

Women are far less likely than men to support fracking because they rely more on feel and gut reaction than facts, according to the woman representing the UK shale gas industry.

Averil Macdonald, who was appointed chair of UK Onshore Oil and Gas this week, said that giving women more information about the controversial practice would not change their minds.

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Source: Guardian Environment

National Trust acquires Isle of Wight farmland that inspired Tennyson

The 165-hectare coastal area is already home to rare butterflies and the trust hopes to encourage the return of birds that were once common there

A beautiful farm set in a landscape associated with rare butterflies and the poet Alfred Tennyson has become the National Trust’s largest coastal acquisition in over two decades.

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Source: Guardian Environment

Marine conservationists claim Japanese fishermen are dumping dolphin corpses at sea

Fishermen dumping small dolphins so they can fill quota with more profitable specimens as annual Taiji dolphin hunt begins, says Sea Shepherd

Marine conservationists have claimed that fishermen in the Japanese town of Taiji are dumping the corpses of small dolphins out at sea so that they can fill their annual quota with larger, more profitable specimens.

The conservation organisation Sea Shepherd released images on Thursday of a juvenile Risso’s dolphin it claimed had washed ashore in Taiji after being thrown overboard by local fishermen, who began their annual dolphin hunt last month.

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Source: Guardian Environment

There’s outrage over steel, but we should be furious over solar power | Ian Birrell

Once David Cameron stood firm on environmental issues. So why is he now savaging such a booming sector?

The former Tory party chairman Grant Shapps is promoting renewable energy in his new role as minister for Africa. Launching a bid to exploit British prowess in the booming solar sector and aid the poor, he insisted governments should be attracted by an energy source that is “so much cleaner” than traditional supplies, and more “attractive”. “Lots of people think that it doesn’t compare favourably with other forms of electricity,” he said. “They haven’t put it all together and it’s hard to know why.”

Related: The government seems intent on ending the solar power industry. It’s madness | Howard Johns

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Source: Guardian Environment

Eaten sweet potato? Then you’ve had a GM meal | Letters

The sweet potato (commonly called a yam) is a familiar vegetable on our supermarket shelves and it is indeed an achievement to grow the sweet potato in the UK (British farmers crack the sweet potato, 18 October). The sweet potato is eaten by some billion people worldwide and is high in vitamins A and C and fibre as well as starch.

If you too have eaten sweet potato you have eaten your first GM meal. Some 8,000 years ago a bacterium (Agrobacterium) inserted two of its genes into the original sweet potato DNA thus producing a GM sweet potato. These genes have been detected in some 300 varieties of “yam”; they are expressed and cause tissues like the root to swell. Domestication was probably based on root size and thus continued propagation of its GM variety.

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Source: Guardian Environment

It'll take more than a tickle to push bank customers into switching

The Competition and Markets Authority’s suggested measures for reform of the banking sector will have little effect

The Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) had three options. The first was the radical one of breaking up the big banks on the grounds that nothing less would address the “striking” stability in market shares over time. The second route was the imaginative idea of abolishing “free” in-credit banking, thereby exposing the rotten rates for savers and, perhaps, encouraging punters to shop around. The third was a technocratic fiddle to try to tell customers what they’re missing.

To the surprise of almost nobody, the CMA chose the third – a tickle. It used different language, of course. Alasdair Smith, the panel chairman, thinks the measures will have “a far-reaching impact on how banks operate and will empower account holders to search for and switch to the account that suits them best”.

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Source: Guardian Environment