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Demolition waste audit and management plan
A minimum of 55% by weight of the non-hazardous waste generated during demolition and strip-out works, and excluding excavations and backfilling, shall be prepared for re-use, recycling and other forms of material recovery (excluding backfilling in existing quarries). This shall include: (i) Timber, glass, metal, brick, stone, ceramic and concrete materials recovered from the main building structures; (ii) Fit-out and non-structural elements, to include doors and their frames, flooring, ceiling tiles, gypsum panels, plastic profiles, insulation materials window frames, window glass, bricks, concrete in the form of blocks and precast elements, steel rebars.
The contractor shall carry out a pre-demolition/strip-out audit in order to determine what can be re-used, recycled or recovered. This shall comprise: (i) Identification and risk assessment of hazardous waste (including WEEE) that may require specialist handling and treatment, or emissions that may arise during demolition; (ii) A bill of quantities with a breakdown of different building materials and products, (iii) An estimate of the % re-use and recycling potential based on proposals for systems of separate collection during the demolition process,
The materials, products and elements identified shall be itemised in the Demolition Bill of Quantities
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Verification: |
The lead construction contractor, Design & Build contractor or DBO contractor shall submit a pre- demolition/strip-put audit that contains the specified information.
A system shall be used to monitor and account for waste arisings. The destination of consignments of waste and end-of-waste materials shall be tracked using consignment notes and invoices. Monitoring data shall be provided to the contracting authority.
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Installation and commissioning of building energy systems
The following systems shall be designed, installed and commissioned in conformance with the agreed designs and specifications:
– Heating, cooling and ventilation (HVAC) – Low and Zero Carbon energy technologies – Building Energy Management System (BEMS) – Lighting controls
Each system shall be subjected to functional performance testing, including measurement of performance. HVAC systems shall be in conformance with EN12599 or equivalent and, as relevant to other systems installed, other applicable EN, ISO or national standards, or their equivalent.
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