Project manager Okhelwa Gampu at Portwood Café, the first in the precinct to be built from reusable materials.
On World Environment Day, marked on June 5 annually, the V&A Waterfront unveiled its latest “green” project - a café built using only waste materials harvested throughout the precinct.
The café, located opposite The Ridge in Dock Road, was open to a few guests on Wednesday.
Project manager Okhelwa Gampu, said the café, which will be called Portwood Café, was built from 98% recyclable materials, including the art piece - a feature wall made with recycled glass bottles.
She said the materials used were salvaged from the demolished sites around the Waterfront where there was lots of ongoing development. “It's a laborious process, picking through waste materials and treating them, then putting them together to create this. While this was a first and putting it together took a long time, there was an educational aspect of working with other forms of building material. Some of the materials were condemned so we improvise sometimes, but our café came together.
She said some of the materials had to be new for the sake of compliance.
The Waterfront’s head of communications, Donald Kau, said: “This is a low-tech, low energy building and certainly the first of its kind in the Waterfront.
“We believe that this demonstration can highlight the role of alternative building methodologies for broader applications and sector development, demonstrating circular economy thinking in practice.”
The café is in walking distance to the Waterfront’s greenest building, The Ridge, constructed with eco-bricks and natural materials, and will include lots of greenery, natural ventilation and support for non-motorised transport.
Behind the café is a food garden, managed by the Waterfront. The produce grown there is given to NGOs and feeding schemes in the city and surrounds, said Mr Kau.
The cafe’s unveiling comes two weeks after the Waterfront, together with LuvSide GmbH, a German manufacturer, unveiled four LS Double Helix 1.0 turbines in the Silo District, aiming to show their commitment to sustainability by using wind energy to support the main supply at the precinct.
Petro Myburg, senior manager for sustainability at the Waterfront, said the sustainability journey started in 2008 when South Africa implemented water restrictions.
She said since then the precinct had managed to implement a trail of sustainable development initiatives, including:
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