Inside the Paris Olympic Village: Recycled fish nets and geothermal power
18th July 2024
The 2024 Olympics will take place in the French capital in Paris.
- Paris 2024 organisers set out to make the village as environmentally friendly as possible.
- This follows concerns about the vast emissions caused by the Games - from the construction work, the air miles and catering.
- The 2,800 apartments will generate around half of the carbon emissions compared to equivalents built.
The athletes' village for the Paris Olympics, which welcomed
its first athletes on Thursday, contains a host of innovations intended to make
it a model of low-carbon construction.
Faced with concerns about the vast emissions caused by the Games - from the construction work, the air miles and catering - Paris 2024 organisers set out to make the village as environmentally friendly as possible.
With its roughly 40 different blocks, it was intended to be
a "coherent model of the best things we can do at the start of the 21st
century, even a bit ahead of time," the head of the Paris Olympics
infrastructure group, Nicolas Ferrand, said earlier this year.
The 2,800 apartments will generate around half of the carbon
emissions compared to equivalents built with regular construction techniques
when energy savings over their lifetimes are taken into account, the Paris
Games infrastructure body Solideo says.
After they have been used by Olympians and Paralympians
between July 26 and September 8, the apartments will be converted into homes,
with at least a third destined for public housing. Here are some of their
features
Play
here and stand a chance of winning the over 13 Million SportPesa Midweek
Jackpot
Naturally cool
Organisers are proud of offering an Olympic village that
they say does not require air-conditioning to keep residents cool, with
temperatures inside set to be at least 6 degrees Celsius (42 Fahrenheit) lower
than outside in summer.
As well as high-performance insulation and sun shades, the
secret is reversible underfloor plumbing linked to a local geothermal power
plant that draws cool water from beneath the surface during the summer and heat
from far underground in the winter.
The renewable system helps dramatically reduce operational
costs and the carbon footprint of the buildings, but it has alarmed some
sporting delegations given Paris' recent record-breaking summers.
Around 2,500 temporary and portable air-conditioning units
have been installed, paid for by national teams from the United States,
Australia and Japan among others.
ALSO READ: Paris: The ultimate challenge for Kenya's marathon legend Eliud Kipchoge
Concrete improvements
Real estate companies had to agree to build the apartments
while generating 30 percent less emissions per square metre than a traditional
building under the terms of their contracts, according to Georgina Grenon, head
of sustainability for the Paris Games.
"That brought up new construction techniques," she
told AFP.
In many cases, the builders swapped out carbon-intensive
concrete for wood, resulting in many of the structures using the natural
material for their core support, as well as facades and floors.
Low-carbon concrete -- which uses less energy-intensive
materials and processes to make the bonding agent -- was widely used across the
site.
"We chose materials not for their technical, economic
or architectural qualities, but for their carbon footprint," said Julie
Bosch, project director for real estate group Vinci Immobilier, which built
part of the village.
Recycled concrete was also deployed as ballast on the site
and mixed with compost to form a base layer for the gardens.
ALSO READ: Key lessons Kenyan football can learn from Gor Mahia’s
experience in CECAFA Kagame Cup 2024
Real greenery
As a showcase of a future urban model, the village has large
gardens that account for 40 percent of total land space and include 9,000 trees
and shrubs once the area has been fully developed after the Olympics.
"It's a very high ratio, and with our system of
recycling water, it will enable areas for relaxation and cooling off,"
Charles Richard-Molard, deputy director in charge of public spaces at Solideo,
told reporters.
Water works
The site includes its own mini water treatment centre which
will collect and purify waste water which can then be used on the gardens.
One experimental building, known as "the Cycle
building", will use purified rainwater for its toilets, which are designed
to separate out urine and faeces which can then be converted into fertilisers.
Some of the pavements have been made out of recycled oyster
and seafood shells, which absorb more heat than a traditional tile, while other
walkways contain byproducts of the paper-making industry or resin from pine
trees instead of oil-based bitumen.
ALSO READ: Southgate's exit leaves England with difficult successor search
Circular economy
Of the roughly 300,000 household items destined for the
Olympic village, all are set for a second life afterwards.
"We signed with suppliers only if they were able to
show that they would be able to recycle or re-use," said Julia Watson,
deputy director for the village works at Solideo.
The bed bases will be made of reinforced cardboard and the
mattresses are being manufactured from recycled fishing nets -- the same system
as at the Tokyo Olympics.
Much of the wooden street furniture is from reclaimed wood, while some of the street lighting has been made from recycled steel piping.
ALSO READ: SportPesa launch revolutionary Tujiamini Initiative to nurture
talent