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Sita Bauelemente GmbH

Sita Bauelemente GmbH

Rainwater Flat Roof Drainage Easily Done

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Coca-Cola Enterprises Ltd., Wakefield:
Sita Bauelemente GmbH Pressure flow system “made in Germany”.

Coca-Cola Enterprises Ltd., Wakefield: Sita Bauelemente GmbH Pressure flow system “made in Germany”.

Sita Bauelemente GmbH

At 38 meters high, the new high-bay warehouse of Coca-Cola Enterprises Ltd. is the current highlight of the extensive factory in the English city of Wakefield. Installing a Sita siphonic drainage system for the almost 6,000 square meter flat roof was a challenge that was mastered by industrial climbers.The 33-football-field-sized factory of Coca-Cola Enterprises Ltd. in Wakefield is a superlative facility, the largest and most environmentally friendly fully automatic bottling plant in Europe. A good 6,000 cans of soft drinks and 3,200 PET bottles can be produced here per minute. The plant was recently certified according to the energy management standard ISO 50001, the first in the world. It has been working according to the "zero waste principle" since 2009, by either recycling or incinerating waste. In order to optimize storage capacity and logistics and minimize transport costs, a new high-bay warehouse complex was added to the complex in 2013. The ability to deliver directly to customers will save an average of around 500,000 miles, or 804,672 kilometers of road per year, and reduce the environment's CO2 emissions .
Sponsored
Historical Museum Refurbishment, Hanover:
“Art” of drainage by Sita Bauelemente GmbH

Historical Museum Refurbishment, Hanover: “Art” of drainage by Sita Bauelemente GmbH

Sita Bauelemente GmbH

Navigating Heritage and Modern Standards: The Roof Renovation of the Historical Museum in HanoverBalancing the preservation of a listed building with modern drainage requirements is no small feat. The renovation of the flat roof at the Historical Museum in Hanover required a solution that met legal drainage regulations, flat roof guidelines, and stringent DIN standards. Through an innovative drainage concept, the project team achieved consensus, ensuring both functionality and historical integrity.The Historical Museum, located on the Hohen Ufer, showcases exhibits on the history of Hanover and Lower Saxony. However, its significance extends beyond the exhibits—it lies in the architecture itself. Designed by renowned architect Professor Dieter Oesterlen and opened in 1963/1964, the building incorporates the Beguine Tower, the last remaining city tower, and a section of the old city wall, including the stone quarry wall of the ducal armory from 1643-1649. These historical elements were integrated into the museum's polygonal, three-story structure, which is arranged around a pentagonal inner courtyard. Architect Willi Reichert, who advises Oesterlen's heirs on monument protection, notes, "As an internationally recognized museum and a key part of the cityscape, the Historical Museum is a listed building."The Challenge of Renovating a Historical LandmarkThe museum's extensive 2,620-square-meter flat roof, featuring four staggered shed roofs, had undergone multiple repairs over the decades but had never been fully renovated. The roof faced several critical issues, including water drainage failures, thermal insulation gaps, and problems with watertightness, surface protection, fall prevention, and lightning protection. Architect Willi Reichert summarized the challenge: “Monument protection had absolute priority,” necessitating a contemporary renovation that respected the building’s heritage while addressing its functional deficiencies.

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