ITPI SOARS in green architecture design & construction

ITPI SOARS IN GREEN ARCHITECTURE DESIGN & CONSTRUCTION

 

Primavera Residences recently partnered with BPI Family Savings Bank to conduct a Business and Investment Opportunity Forum. The event called Sustainable Opportunities and Advocacies in the Regions or SOAR was held last October 17, 2013 at the Multi-purpose Hall of Primavera Residences in Pueblo Business Park, Cagayan de Oro City.

Among the topics discussed during the event was “ITPI Green Architecture Design and Construction: The Primavera Residences Experience”. The talk was conducted by ITPI Executive Chairman and CEO Arch. Romolo Nati and he discussed not only what sets Primavera Residences apart from the rest, but also the importance of sustainable architecture.

Here are 10 key points of his discussion.

1. Inspired by nature. ITPI believes that nature holds the answer to sustainable design. Taking a cue from Mother Nature herself, the company strives to develop self-sustaining, flood-free, and earthquake-resistant structures which are inspired by the beauty and functionality of nature. These green structures fuse human technology with the best that nature has to offer.

2. Cross-disciplinary Approach. Primavera Residences is a brainchild of three strong forces: ITPI’s real estate ingenuity, CEC’s  (Constellation Energy Corporation) renewable energy initiatives, and the expertise of RVN+ in Green Architecture and Design. The result? Beautiful, sustainable, and cost-effective designs.

3. Where no one has gone before. Primavera Residences, just like the rest of ITPI’s projects, offer a unique value proposition to its clients. With its eco-friendly design, unique innovations, prime location, and cost-efficient models, ITPI is leading the market in sustainable development.

4. The impact of real estate on the environment. Arch. Nati pointed out that the world’s cities occupy only 2% of the Earth’s land area, and yet it accounts for 70% of harmful greenhouse gas emissions. At the rate we are going, it is expected that by 2030, 59% of the world’s population will be living in urban areas, and by the year 2050, the consumption of energy for cooling will be grow tenfold. Increased energy consumption could lead to an increase in carbon dioxide emissions which will eventually lead to climate change and environmental degradation. Real estate development plays a big role in this, making sustainable architecture a necessary long-term solution.

5. Human resource consumption versus nature. Relying too much on technology coupled with our misconception that we have unlimited resources – this has led to the rapid deterioration of our environment. Where our cities once adapted to the local environment, we now manipulate our environment to adapt to us, hence the big change. To become sustainable, we need to reverse this mindset and change our perspective. We need to go back to nature.

6. Nature as the solution. There are patterns which can be found behind natural living structures. These processes, when studied and thoroughly examined can be translated into architectural designs and sustainable solutions. This is known as biomimicry and it has long been in existence, but has simply been overlooked amid all the new ways of doing things. Making nature as the basis of design allows ITPI to lower energy and resources consumption thereby reducing costs on electricity and water, among others.

7. Performance-based design process. While the traditional way of doing things calls for low tech design and high tech construction, ITPI does the exact opposite with high tech design and low tech construction. This result to lower cost and maintenance as well as low power requirement.

8. Environmental Analysis Tools. To aid ITPI in harnessing the power of nature, different software programs are being used. The different analysis involved include calculations for sunlight hours, wind patterns, and internal daylight. This is a great example of  technology working hand in hand with nature.

9. ITPI Projects. Taking inspiration from the beauty and efficient design found in nature, the completed and upcoming projects of ITPI are of stellar quality and are highly-recognized internationally. These projects include Coral City (Quezon City), Stellar of Light (Payatas, QC), Sto. Tomas (Batangas), and of course, their pet project, Primavera Residences in Cagayan de Oro City which has already sold 188 units in a span of three years.

10. Why go green? Green properties are appraised 10 – 15% higher than its non-green counterparts, retail sales of eco-friendly buildings are higher by 20%, and they sell twice as fast as conventional homes. Therefore, not only are you doing your share in helping reduce environmental degradation, it is also so much more profitable and beneficial in the long run. 

 

Italpinas’ award-winning designs and innovations are all based on ideas drawn from nature, coupled with the foresight, vision, and creativity of the people behind it. For example, did you know that the concept behind Cagayan de Oro’s very own Primavera Residences was actually based on the ventilation system found inside a termite’s mound?

 

 

Want to know more about CDO’s first and only eco-friendly building? Go HERE.

 

 

Green building expert ITPI to builders: adopt ‘biomimicry’ to build smarter, sustainable cities

smarter cities8

 

Adopting the principle of biomimicry and undertaking performance-based design strategies — these are the keys to building sustainably in an environmentally challenged world.

That was the advice of an Italian architect and expert on green building and sustainable agriculture to builders, urban planners, government officials and various other advocates of sustainable development who attended the 2013 International Conference on Smarter Cities held last November 14 to 15 at the Diamond Hotel in Manila.

“By studying the process behind the creation of natural living structures, we are able to find patterns, which transform into design models needed to define architectural solutions,” said architect Romolo V. Nati, Executive Chairman and CEO of the ITALPINAS Euro Asian Design and Eco-Development Corporation (ITPI).

ITPI is a young developer that specializes in the design and development of sustainable buildings. Formed by Nati in 2009 in partnership with Filipino lawyer Jojo Leviste, ITPI invests most of its resources into an in-house research and design (R&D) department that studies sustainable architecture, as well as building in extreme conditions and challenging environments. ITPI is an affiliate of the renewable energy firm Constellation Energy Corp.

biomimicry

Adopting biomimicry — or the intersection of biology and technology — allows architects and builders to put up buildings that use water, energy and other resources efficiently, Nati said, even as he notes that the concept isn’t new and has long been used by the global defense industry.

Nati’s advice was part of his presentation titled “Eco-logic Architecture: Conceptualizing Buildings Differently,” which was given during one of five presentations under the theme Smarter Economy. The presentations were given during parallel sessions on the second day of the conference.

“Becoming sustainable requires a change in perspective,” Nati said. “We need to move from too much reliance on technology and from an inability to more adaptation to the local environment.”

The architect said this is needed because cities occupy only two percent of the world’s land mass but these account for 70 percent of harmful greenhouse gas emissions.

Nati noted: “Right now air conditioning in buildings worldwide consumes 1 trillion kilowatt-hours of electricity each year and by 2050, global consumption of energy for cooling could explode tenfold.”

“Increased CO2 emissions lead to increased energy consumption, which lead to climate change and environmental degradation,” he warned.

He said the solution was to follow nature and adapt more to the local environment by using local material and tapping local know-how when putting up buildings or other developments. He also advised sourcing power locally. “These wouldn’t only be a sustainable practice, but would also lower power requirements, as well as building and maintenance costs,” Nati said.

Performance-based strategies

Nati also recommended that architects and developers use the performance-based strategies that his company employs.

These include sunlight angle calculations for spatial planning optimization, wind analysis for spatial planning optimization and selective daylight internal computation for spatial planning optimization — all done by specialized software.

Organized by the University of the Philippines School of Urban and Regional Planning, the 2013 International Conference on Smarter Cities aimed to begin the public discourse on creating smarter cities in a world beset by overpopulation, rapid population growth, dwindling resources, widespread pollution, climate change and unrestrained urbanization.

The conference brought together builders, developers, engineers, planners and advocates of smart cities from across the world, who shared the ways that smarter technologies can be leveraged to improve the quality of life in cities.

Parallel sessions on six different main themes were held on the second day of the Conference:

  • Smarter Governance
  • Smarter Economy
  • Smarter Mobility
  • Smarter Environment
  • Smarter Planning and Design and
  • Smarter People and Living

Some of the more interesting presentations during the conference were:

  • “Project NOAH: Importance of Technology in Mitigating Hazards” by Mahar A. Lagmay of the UP- National Institute of Geological Sciences for Smarter Governance.
  • “Biofied Space Design – Toward Future Architectural Material, Energy and Integrated Information” by Akiko Watanabe of the Tokyo Denki University, Japan and “Smarter Urban Greening: The Philippine Context” by Arch. Paulo Alcazaren of PGAA Creative Design, Philippines / Singapore and “Landscape Architecture Trends in the Philippines: Ecological Planning as an Approach to the Sustainable Development of Disaster-Prone Sites” by Mary Ann Espina of the UP College of Architecture for Smarter Planning and Design.
  • “Smarter Money for Smarter Cities” by Felix Fuders of the Universidad Austral de Chile for Smarter Economy
  • “Urban Development and Groundwater Management in Asian Cities” by Karen Ann B. Jago-on, UP-SURP and “Planning City Extensions: An Approach to Achieving Sustainable Urban Development” by Christopher Rollo of the United Nations – Human Settlements Programme, Philippines for Smarter Environment
  • “DOST’s Smarter Health Care Program” by Jaime C. Montoya, Department of Science and Technology – Philippine Council for Health Research and Development for Smarter People and Living

 

Developer gives tips on building structures for extreme weather conditions

Designing for Climate Change

It is possible to build homes, buildings — and even cities — that have a much better chance of withstanding super typhoons and other extreme weather conditions resulting from climate change.

This is according to an Italian architect and expert on green building and sustainable architecture who is offering to contribute his skills to help rebuild Leyte and the other parts of the Visayas that have been recently devastated by typhoon Yolanda.

“Buildings and cities can be planned, designed and developed to minimize and in some cases avoid damage created by 20-foot storm surges and other extreme conditions,” said Architect Romolo V. Nati, Executive Chairman and CEO of ITALPINAS Euroasian Design and Eco-Development Corporation (ITPI), a real estate company that specializes in the design and development of sustainable buildings.

The second deadliest typhoon on record, Yolanda (Haiyan), slammed into Eastern Visayas early this month, killing thousands, destroying at least a million houses and leaving millions homeless.  On Sunday, Yolanda’s death toll was over 5,000 and still rising.

Much of the destruction was caused by the super strong winds and the storm surge brought by the Category 5 typhoon.

Opportunity to rebuild damaged communities

“I feel very sad for the Filipinos in Tacloban City in Leyte who have to deal with the death and destruction brought by Yolanda, and I would like to help them get back on their feet,” said Nati, who has made the Philippines his adoptive home for four years.

“But I would like to remind them that in every loss, there is also opportunity,” he said.  “With most of Tacloban City in Leyte and Guiuan in Samar flattened by the storm, there is now a chance to develop the master plans of the new cities and towns — sustainable master plans that take into account the need to survive typhoons and build sustainable habitats.

Read more of the story here.

-Danilova Molintas

Featured in GMA News Online, 24 November 2013

Travelling Eco-friendly to CDO

Global warming or climate change has been the talk of the world ever since there has been a visible and feelable effect on all our places, even in Cagayan de Oro. Not everyone is aware of this, no idea of it, or no care about it at all because they have no idea how it affects them and their families.

 

Travelling eco-friendly in CDO

Waterworld if climate change isn’t controlled. As it is, polar bears are fast losing their glacier homes because of global warming.  Th effect is global as well as local, as we Kagay-anons know very well.

 

Climate change means the global rise in temperature change of the air and the sea. People are seeing all the change all over the world. Glaciers are disappearing, the arctic sea is melting, storms, heat waves are forming everywhere, plants and flowers are blooming earlier than expected, and unfamiliar insects in our territories are emerging from all angles, birds and other animals are multiplying before they are expected to and those animals that are supposedly hibernating are all awake – the cycles are distorted.

So you ask, what is going on? The planet is getting warmer. Any change in our climate affects each and every one of us. Humans are known to be high energy consumers. No one can deny we consume almost all the energy than any other living creature there is on the planet.

We use tons of energy in our everyday tasks – from cleaning, heating, pumping, even disposing of water. Even the food that we eat is an enormous source of greenhouse gases: the fossil fuels we use in fertilizers and farm machinery, the processing of food, transportation – cars, ships, even jets, the cooking and packing. Even construction requires all kinds of building materials that can only be made with massive amounts of energy.

Even the major necessity we have which is electricity isn’t captured magically – it takes the burning of immense amounts of fossil fuel to convert energy into electrical current. Majority of the things in our lives – clothes, mobile phones, toothbrushes, etc. – are all made using energy.

Individually, we may not be able to make much of a difference. But if we all combine our habits of conservation, I do believe we can do something to minimize our carbon footprint. Even when we travel.

When travelling to CDO, here are a few tips to help conserve energy:

  1. Book your next flight to an airline that is environmental friendly
  2. Stay in a green hotel – (in CDO it’s Primavera Residences)
  3. Drink eco-friendly water (bring your own stainless water containers instead of buying plastic bottles).
  4. Reduce any excess use of carbon or plastic use.
  5. And lastly – Reduce, reuse, recyle in any way possible – even hotel freebies.

Interested in an eco-friendly travel to Cagayan de Oro? Click here to find out how to check in into the only eco-friendly condotel in Mindanao.

 

Photo from freedigitalphotos.net


How climate change is affecting lifestyle

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Throughout the world landscapes are rapidly changing. The carving of mountains and the shaping of beaches have become abrupt, overnight miracles – or nightmares. This change has been brought about by the global change in temperature which has caused the weather patterns to be erratic, and recently, severe.

The island of Mindanao had seen better days when most of its areas were considered typhoon-free, experiencing mild, amicable weather. The tragedy of Sendong jarred not only Northern Mindanao but the rest of the island as well with torrential floods swallowing up communities. Just recently, typhoonYolanda with international name Haiyan slammed into the Visayan islands, decimating trees, homes and people’s lives. It packed winds of 235 kph (147 mph), gusts of up to 275 kph (170 mph), and a storm surge of 6 meters (20 feet).

The people started to be aware of the environment, of the depleting natural resources that have protected the land from devastation for so long.

It is not enough that we try to prevent further loss of our resources by preserving what is left. First, it is not practical as these are the sources of many of our basic needs. Second, preserving is different from conserving – the former being static, the latter being more active, enhancing.

It is therefore necessary that our lifestyles be molded to the advantage of the environment. For example, our basic need for shelter need not be too resource-extractive. Globally, there is already a move of opting for houses with an eco-friendly design.

In Cagayan de Oro, for example, a ‘green’ building had been put up which utilizes renewable energy and is structured with careful details based on the characteristics of nature. It utilized solar panels for its roofing and took note of the shades created by the different positions of the sun throughout the day to help maintain coolness in its interiors.

Another lifestyle change could be avoiding plastic bags when doing groceries or having take-away meals in Styrofoam. It adds to the pile of garbage, which, when not disposed properly, clogs the drainage system and adds to the problem of flooding.

There are several other things we can do to adapt to the changes and even mitigate the damage brought on by climate change. We only have to look closely at our natural environment and align our activities to its characteristics and movements.

Do you know that Cagayan de Oro is a pioneer in designing lifestyle with climate change? Click here to find out more.

PH envoy at climate meet urges immediate action

Philippine delegate Yeb Sano received a standing ovation after delivering a passionate address to the United Nations climate conference in Warsaw on Monday.

“Today I say we care. We can fix this. We can stop this madness right now, right here in the middle of this football field and start moving the goal posts. Mr President, your excellencies, honourable ministers. My delegation calls on you respectfully to lead us and let Poland and Warsaw be remembered forever as the place were we truly cared to stop this madness,” he said.

Delegates gave him a standing ovation as Sano wiped away his tears.

In the Philippine town of Tacloban, dazed survivors begged for help and scavenged for food, water and medicine, as relief workers struggled to reach victims of super typhoon Haiyan that killed an estimated 10,000 people in the central Philippines.

As President Benigno Aquino deployed hundreds of soldiers in the coastal city of Tacloban to quell looting, the huge scale of death and destruction become clearer as reports emerged of thousands of people missing and images showed apocalyptic scenes in one town that has not been reached by rescue workers.

“My country is just reeling from another category five typhoon and what we are counting are the dead, they are being buried, washed away by this abomination that is not our doing. so what more can we ask from this conference but to move those talks and those commitments into action. We are ready to engage. We are ready. All our systems are now ready to take on the resiliency path but we need all your commitments and therefore I ask our world leaders to deliver something in Warsaw. To deliver action and not just commitments and words,” another member of the Philippine delegation, Alicia Ilaga, told a news conference.

Tasneem Essop from the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) said the disaster in the Philippines was a wake-up call.

Continue reading story here.

Nature: a source of inspiration for tomorrow’s buildings

The reason that Italian-Filipino company ITALPINAS Eco-logic Design and Development Corporation (ITPI) was founded at the beginning of 2009 was that its prime movers – Italian Arch. Romolo V. Nati and Filipino Atty. Jojo Leviste – both shared the same vision and passion in promoting sustainable developments in the Philippines.

“What we do in the present will change the future,” says Arch. Nati, Executive Chairman and CEO of ITPI. “We consume the earth’s resources as if they were built to last forever. Unfortunately, this is not always the case. If we don’t act on it now, these resources will someday run out.” As a real estate developer, the ITPI team takes it upon themselves to build a sustainable environment and a better world. To do this, they take inspiration from nature.

NATURE: A SOURCE OF INSPIRATION FOR TOMORROW’S BUILDINGS

Nature provides the inspiration for eco-friendly, earthquake,  and flood-free structures

 

“Albert Einstein once said, ‘Look deep into nature, and then you will understand everything better,’” shares Atty. Leviste, ITPI President. “Nature shares with us each day the secrets of her beautiful, elegant, efficient and effortless creations; and these give us inspiration to design cost-effective and self-sustaining models, which we transform into architectural solutions.”

 

NATURE: A SOURCE OF INSPIRATION FOR TOMORROW’S BUILDINGS

The performance-based design of Primavera Residences in Cagayan de Oro optimizes the building’s energy saving and producing aspects.

 

True to their word, ITPI can boast of their first mixed-use project, the Primavera Residences, which is located in Uptown Cagayan de Oro. Arch. Nati adds: “We gave particular attention to the design phase by following a strategy similar to what nature uses in evolving living structures: we call it ‘Performance-Based Design.’ This permits us to extensively study the project’s location to be able to optimize the building’s energy saving and producing aspects, delivering the best product to our clients and investors.” The emphasis on the design has allowed ITPI to reduce Primavera Residences’ overall environmental impact – from the reduction of energy consumption and optimizing construction techniques to its maintenance operations.

Through ITPI’s performance-based design strategy, they are able to come up with a well-performing building, which also happens to be beautiful. “We don’t design thinking about beauty; there is no such concept in nature,” explains Arch. Nati. “It’s the process that matters. We don’t design the form; we design the process that makes the form.”

 

NATURE: A SOURCE OF INSPIRATION FOR TOMORROW’S BUILDINGS

In a termite mound, air gets drawn from the outside and circulated throughout the mound.

 

And with this came Primavera Residences – taking inspiration from a termite mound’s natural ventilation scheme, ITPI’s first project in CdO is able to cool the air from outside that gets drawn into the building. This air then is vented into the building’s floors creating a cross ventilation among the units inside it before exiting through the open space at the top, like a chimney. The constant air circulation, among other energy saving features of the building, results in a 32% decrease in air conditioner consumption. “Our design is a result of extensive research into the location of our project and its interaction with the different environmental elements,” says Atty. Leviste. “More than just a building, it is an entire system that enriches its surroundings and evolves through time with new components.”

NATURE: A SOURCE OF INSPIRATION FOR TOMORROW’S BUILDINGS

At Primavera Residences, the constant air circulation, among other energy saving features of the building, results in a 32% decrease in air conditioner consumption

 

Aside from minimizing energy usage and being environmentally responsible, Primavera Residences is also known for its Italian design. It exudes modern and minimalist elegance throughout the entire building, whether in the exterior or interior.  “Other than benefiting from the high technology used in the design process, we also wanted our end-users to experience the Italian lifestyle without having to travel all the way to Italy,” says Arch. Nati. Partnering with Italian painter Nino Quartana, ITPI transformed Primavera Residences into an Italian gallery filled with Quartana’s work.

 

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The work of Italian painter Nino Quartana graces the rooms and halls of Primavera Residences in Cagayan de Oro.

 

Nino Quartana, who is also a ceramist and stage designer from Sicily, began exhibiting his works in Italy in 1979. Since he moved to Manila in January 2007, his works have been featured in many local galleries, such as Galleria Duemila, Ayala Museum, the San Agustin Museum, and most recently, at Galeria Roces in Malacañang Palace. Aside from organizing exhibitions, Quartana has also conducted workshops in many parts of the country, from the city of Legazpi in the Bicol region to the city of Angono in the Rizal province, the Philippines’ art capital.

 

Partners JDL RVN 2Italian Arch. Romolo V. Nati and Filipino Atty. Jojo Leviste are prime movers in sustainable development in the Philippines.

 

His paintings at Primavera Residences, which, like ITPI’s works, are also influenced by nature, from their colors to their forms. Quartana’s works pay homage to the Philippines’ beautiful beaches. Although they are not explicitly represented, he is able to create the affinity between Italian impressions and Philippine landscapes just from the way he colors the sun, skies, seas and coral reefs.

His strength is his ability  to transmit to the viewers this particular image of nature. Quartana’s conceptual art, with its vivid clarity, transports his viewers into a whirlwind of spatial and ‘natural’ sensations that stir in new and unexpected emotions.

So step inside Primavera Residences and allow yourself to be carried away by nature. Buon viaggio!

On Business Week Mindanao: Typhoon-adaptable green shelters help Pinoys adapt to climate change

Designing for Climate Change

 

 

AN Italian-Filipino company advocating green architecture has designed houses and buildings that can cope with typhoons, floods and other calamities brought by climate change.

Italian architect Romolo V. Nati, Executive Chairman and CEO of ITPI (Italpinas Euroasian Design and Eco-Development Corporation (ITPI), has put presented his coral-inspired designs to encourage Filipinos to build typhoon and flood-adaptable shelters in the aftermath of destructive calamities sweeping the country.

“Our role model is nature and its ability to adapt to drastic changes in the environment,” Nati said of his design based on the Voronoi Diagram, a mathematical way of dividing space into regions or cells, a characteristic present in the structures of corals.

ITPI’s coral design bagged the “Special Energy Award,” besting 200 entries from 50 countries in the Design Against the Elements (DAtE) global competition in 2011 supported and co-sponsored by the National Geographic Society, the Climate Change Commission, and United Architects of the Philippines.

Read the rest of the story here.

 

Featured on Business Week Mindanao, 15 September 2013

Green architect unveils ‘Coral City’ housing

Coral City

 

A Filipino-Italian company advocating green architecture has proposed the construction of houses and buildings that can quickly adapt and withstand typhoons, floods and other calamities due to climate change

Italian architect Romolo Nati, executive chairman and CEO of Italpinas Euroasian Design and Eco-Development (ITPI), has introduced his Philippine coral-inspired designs to encourage Filipinos to build typhoon and flood-resistant shelters in the aftermath of destructive Typhoon Maring

Read the story here

 

Featured on Carbon New, 06 September 2013

On Manila Standard Today: Typhoon and Flood Resistant Shelters for Filipinos

Calamities-influencing-design - Coral City

 Aerial rendition of “Coral City”

 

A design concept from ITPI that proposes the construction of houses and buildings that can quickly adapt and withstand typhoons, floods and other calamities due to climate change

 

A Filipino-Italian company advocating green architecture has proposed the construction of houses and buildings that can quickly adapt and withstand typhoons, floods and other calamities due to climate change

Italian architect Romolo V

  Nati, Executive Chairman and CEO of ITALPINAS Euroasian Design and Eco-Development Corporation (ITPI), has put forward his Philippine coral-inspired designs to encourage Filipinos to build typhoon and flood-resistant shelters in the aftermath of destructive Tropical Storm Maring

Wondering how nature can help?

Read story here

Ciao, and till next time!

 

 

From Manila Standard Today: 3 September 2013