One Angel Square reflects a growing awareness that sustainability pays
Project Details
- Scheme & Version: BREEAM Offices 2008
- Stage: Final
- Size: 30,500m2
- Location: Manchester, UK
- Score & Rating: 95.1% Outstanding
- Certificate Number: BREEAM-0048-1754
- BREEAM Awards Winner 2013
Read our press release from the official opening of the building by HM Queen on 14 November here.
Project Team
- Client: The Co-operative Group
- Architect: 3DReid
- Project manager and QS: Gardiner & Theobald
- Structural and M&E engineer: Buro Happold
- Contractor: BAM Construction
Related Links
About the Building
One Angel Square in Manchester is the Co-operative Group’s new headquarters building, where more than 3,000 Co-op employees are co-located in one office for the first time.
The 15-storey building is a three-sided structure, with a fully glazed double skin façade that curves both horizontally and vertically around the building. There is a full-height atrium at the heart of the triangular building, its three sides formed from white-painted concrete balconies at each floor level. Behind the balconies there are large, column-free open-plan office floors.
THE CO-OPERATIVE GROUP WEBSITE SAYS ‘By designing to the BREEAM standards we aim to save 40-60% of our current energy costs in the head office complex. Our new home will create a benchmark for every other UK business and showcase what can be achieved through a socially responsible approach to design and construction.’
Environmental Features
The double-skinned facade and soaring open atrium are key to creating natural heating, cooling and lighting. The atrium, for example, floods the building’s interior with light, and the facade helps to minimise heating and cooling loads.
In summer louvres at the top of the facade will open to allow the warmed air trapped between its inner and outer skins to rise up and out of the building. In winter these louvres will close so the facade can form an insulated blanket around the building.
The building has its own source of heat and power generation through a CHP (combined heat and power) plant.
Other features include:
- heat recovery from the IT systems that will also help to heat the building
- low energy LED lighting and IT equipment and systems
- greywater and rainwater recycling systems for toilet flushing and irrigation
- high-efficiency passenger and service lifts