Newsletter - Links - Advertise - Contact Us - Privacy
 

Fife College think outside the box for low carbon Dunfermline campus

May 7 2025

Fife College think outside the box for low carbon Dunfermline campus

Fife College has unveiled its Dunfermline City Campus, the first net-zero carbon tertiary education building in Scotland and the other half of the recently completed Dunfermline Learning Campus.

Scheduled to formally open later in the year, the further education facility comprises a campus of three new buildings designed by Reiach & Hall Architects.

Attaining an embodied carbon footprint of 560kg CO2e/m2 for the teaching building and a total embodied carbon footprint of 601kg Co2e/m2 as a whole the campus is held as a pathfinder project for the Net Zero Public Sector Buildings Standard.

To hit these targets, the project team, which includes A10, Woolgar Hunter, Horner and McLellan, Balfour Beatty, replaced concrete floor slabs with cross laminated timber planks, held up by beams fabricated using 96% recycled steel. A knock-on benefit of this approach is a significantly reduced structural load, reducing the volume of concrete required for the superstructure and foundations. As a result, embodied carbon totals fall 20% below what would ordinarily be expected for a building of this scale.

Stewart MacPhail, project director for Balfour Beatty, commented: “Close collaboration with Fife College, the design teams, and our supply chain has been key to delivering the industry-leading carbon performance achieved in the teaching building. The successful external verification gives us confidence in the accuracy and integrity of our carbon figures and reinforces what can be achieved through innovation and partnership.”

Offsite manufacturing was employed for some mechanical and electrical components of the building, minimising the requirement for on-site labour and reducing wastage. 

A formal opening date has still to be set
A formal opening date has still to be set
The project comfortably exceeds an initial embodied carbon target of 650kg CO2e/m2
The project comfortably exceeds an initial embodied carbon target of 650kg CO2e/m2

4 Comments

monkey9000
#1 Posted by monkey9000 on 7 May 2025 at 14:38 PM
This is it "unveiled"!? Looks like a hellscape. Choose your images carefully for a publicity drive.
Logistics Hub
#2 Posted by Logistics Hub on 7 May 2025 at 17:16 PM
As good a looking industrial unit as I’ve seen …… phwar
Mark
#3 Posted by Mark on 7 May 2025 at 22:25 PM
Agree with #1 & 2, that's a poorly chosen viewpoint for a PR shot. For a sustainable building it appears to have tons of M&E plant: whatever happened to shallow plan buildings with natural cross-ventilation, and internal courtyards to allow light and air into the depth of the floorplate?
Fat Bloke on Tour
#4 Posted by Fat Bloke on Tour on 8 May 2025 at 11:02 AM
Project team vibe -- like some sort of endless list of Dickensian lawyers stretching out into the middle distance.

Not good -- middle class welfare in full flow.

Lots of talk about embodied carbon with nothing mentioned regarding cost -- I wonder why.

Design -- as mentioned by others it is pretty poor.
Learning cube is not a good look -- Death Star Poly comes to mind.

Post your comments

 

All comments are pre-moderated and
must obey our house rules.

 

Back to May 2025

Search News
Subscribe to Urban Realm Magazine
Features & Reports
For more information from the industry visit our Features & Reports section.