Gold Standard

  For developers like Menarco Development Corporation and Nova Group, efforts in water conservation stem from valuing water like gold. 

                                     
 Menarco Tower (left) in Bonifacio Global City and Nex Tower (right) in Ayala Avenue are statements for sustainability in their respective business districts.

Prior to the pandemic, buildings and building constructions reached an all-time high in carbon emissions. The UNEP stated the sector has accounted for 38% of all energy-related CO2 emissions in 2019. To be on track to achieving a net-zero carbon building stock by 2050, the International Energy Agency recommends that building sector emissions should be reduced by around 6% annually from 2020 to 2030. A lot of this change will be propelled by shifting to renewable energy sources and increasing resource efficiency (meaning doing more with one unit whether it is kilowatt-hour or cubic meter).

 Nova Group founder Chut Cuerva and Menarco Development Corp. founder Carmen Jimenez-Ong

For Menarco Development Corporation’s Carmen Jimenez-Ong and Nova Group’s Chut Cuerva, this means making a single drop of water go through their buildings multiple times before it is discharged. Nova’s Nex Tower in Ayala Avenue is Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) Platinum certified and is the sole Philippine project to ever bag Urban Land Institute’s Asia Pacific Award for Excellence. Meanwhile, Menarco Tower in Bonifacio Global City is the first to pursue WELL certification in the country, and the only building in Asia to be both LEED Gold and WELL Gold certified.


Menarco Tower has reduced potable water use by 47.49%. Potable water for sewage conveyance is reduced by 100%. Landscaping and irrigation systems in Menarco have been designed to use only recycled water. Instead of using clean, potable water to do things that do not require potable water that people should be drinking, a gray water system filters water from the condensate drains and water used for washing, plows it back into the system to water the plants. Nex Tower uses the same principles. Instead of water from the mains, a rainwater harvesting system collects rain that falls on the roof and filters it to irrigate the plants.

“It comes from a philosophy of treating water like gold, saving it when and where you can,” says Jimenez-Ong.

“You wouldn’t think there’d be water shortages when it rains like crazy here. But what we are trying to do is store the water. When there is plenty of water, you can store that so when there is no water, you use that. It’s a similar predicament to solar panels. When it is sunny, you want to store that energy in a battery and then use it when the rates are expensive,” says Cuerva.

 


The other benefit of storing water is that during huge downpours, it helps the sewerage systems. If more buildings like Nex and Menarco capture rain during these downpours, then slowly releasing the excess into the sewerage systems instead of dumping it all at one time, they would help ease flooding in our cities.

Another piece of the water conservation strategy is selecting the correct bathroom fixtures. Faucets in older buildings are usually left running because people forget or they are not closed properly. “By using a sensor, the person using the faucet does not have to worry about that, and we don’t have to police that. Same thing with the toilets and the urinals, they have auto flush, so a toilet or urinal will calculate how long you are sitting there and use the right amount of water to flush. So that’s the approach we took. By choosing the right fixtures, we are saving 46 percent more water than your standard building,” says Cuerva.

For Jimenez-Ong, educating onboarding tenants on how to properly use the building amenities was crucial. It keeps operations sustainable and reduces maintenance costs. “Menarco is my only baby. So, come, you are welcome to enjoy it, but let’s learn how to use it. We have a video. We have written forms, almost like a test, just so we know that they know. We do this prior to issuing you an RFID. I don’t want to hear it that you flushed something that clogged our system because you didn’t know.”

 “What I was hoping for are things from groups like LIXIL to help us figure out how to be more efficient in conserving not just water that we see but also water that we don’t see,” she adds.

Pioneering water products manufacturer LIXIL, whose portfolio includes INAX, GROHE and American Standard, has been rallying its R&D around environmental sustainability and recently met some milestones. “I think that's the biggest investment LIXIL has made to get people fully committed to the cause,” LIXIL’s Corporate Responsibility Lead Priyanka Tanwar.

GROHE’s Sense and Sense Guard water monitoring systems alert homeowners of pipe leaks so they can be addressed immediately. The app monitors and reports consumption so people can adjust their water use.  Moreover, all of GROHE’s products are produced in carbon-neutral plants and a series of fixtures have recently been certified Cradle-to-Cradle Gold.Products like Amercian Standard’s Genie can save up to 35% of water with every single use. Aqua Ceramic ensures that your products stay clean and therefore lessens amount of water is used in maintenance.

The United Nations reports that 2.3 billion people now live in water-stressed countries. At least 1.42 billion people, including 450 million children, live in water vulnerable areas. By 2030, 700 million people worldwide could be displaced by intense water scarcity. “When you read facts like this, the little things we do translate over time and really help people. We are all connected,” says Jimenez Ong.

 A drop of water, a minute or electricity, a single degree in global temperature change—it all adds up. Moreover, the climate does not recognize territorial jurisdictions. What Philippine developers do here and now, and what big global companies like LIXIL does in their factories all over the world sends ripples of change across borders and generations. Indeed, we are all connected.


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