Haven Banks, Exeter
- LocationExeter
- Completion DateNov 2015
Haven Banks is a £5.6million outdoor education & training facility located on Exeter’s historic canalside. It provides 25,000 young people a year with the chance to participate in courses on sailing, canoeing, kayaking, windsurfing, climbing, caving, orienteering, archery, raft building, team building and first aid.
Specially built in 2013, renewable energy was an essential part of the building’s design specification. Kensa Heat Pumps were able to provide a sustainable and efficient supply of heating and hot water by extracting heat energy from the river Exe using ground source heat pumps.
Being able to extract heat energy from the river made the system particularly efficient, as water is an excellent conductor and has a higher heat transfer rate than the ground. The river current provides a replenishing energy source and as there was no need to dig any trenches or boreholes, the installation cost was greatly reduced. The building has underfloor heating installed throughout which further increases the efficiency of the heat pump due to its low outlet temperature.
Due to the large size of the building and its very high heat load, Kensa supplied two 30kW Plantroom units to supply heating and hot water to the activity centre. The heat pumps are housed in a plantroom and controlled by a bespoke building management system linked to a gas boiler which only operates if the ground source heat pump system needs additional back up.
Kensa assembled ten specially designed ‘pond mats’ made up of 250m of coiled pipes mounted on stainless steel frames. Each pond mat was sailed over to the quayside next to the building where they were submerged in the river and connected to the centre’s heat pumps one by one. As the granite wall on the canalside is protected, the pipework and manifolds that connect the pond mats to the heat pumps are housed in a custom built wooden shelter, therefore, avoiding any drilling through or under the wall.
Exeter-based renewable company SunGift Solar (https://www.sungiftsolar.co.uk/)were responsible for the installation which took around 7 days.
Jamie Burnham from SunGift Solar said:
He continues:
Please note, the RHI scheme has now closed – please visit this page (https://www.kensaheatpumps.com/funding/) to explore other funding).