News

Industries

Companies

Jobs

Events

People

Video

Audio

Galleries

My Biz

Submit content

My Account

Advertise with us

Growthpoint and GBCSA launch Greenovate Awards

Growthpoint Properties and the Green Building Council of South Africa (GBCSA) have launched a new competition for students.
Growthpoint and GBCSA launch Greenovate Awards
© Ella-Sarkisyan – za.fotolia.com

The Greenovate Awards aim to inspire and encourage students of the built environment to discover, explore and invent ways to live more sustainably.

"The built environment has a major impact on the environment and sustainability. With the Greenovate Awards, we want to recognise excellence and innovation in students' own understanding of green principles for the built environment, across all aspects and disciplines. These aspiring young professionals have the potential to transform the way we live, with gentler impacts on the world around us. The Greenovate Awards will link environmental challenges to innovative thinking," says Werner van Antwerpen, head of utilities and sustainability at Growthpoint Properties.

According to the GBCSA's CEO, Brian Wilkinson, besides igniting a new wave of green thinking, the aim of the programme is also to educate as many property, construction and quantity surveying third year and honours level students as possible in green building principles. This includes awareness of South Africa's own Green Star SA rating system.

Investing in future

"We want to encourage students to learn about green building and sustainability early on in their careers. Investing in the youth is investing in our future. These are tomorrow's leaders who will take the green building movement forward and ensure it continues to innovate and inspire. Essentially, we want them to enter the market as advocates for green building with a passion to create better, more sustainable, cities, towns and neighbourhoods," Wilkinson continues.

The awards programme will be set up and piloted at the University of Cape Town, University of the Witwatersrand and University of Pretoria, and the competition will test the interest of both students and faculty. If the pilot is successful, it will be rolled out to all universities in the country with the appropriate built environment faculties.

The challenge is for students to come up with ideas that would result in a research project that promotes a more sustainable built environment. These can be applied to any aspect of a building; design, development, planning, construction, materials - anything that makes the way we live greener and our environmental footprint lighter.

Integrated approach

Round one of the competition will take place internally and each university's panel will select the top two projects submitted by student groups. "Collaboration between different departments will be allowed. We really hope to see students placed in an environment that requires the use of an integrated approach to problem solving with a shared vision across all disciplines in the built environment," says Van Antwerpen.

Workshops with industry professionals will run from March through to September and the top six projects will be selected by mid-November. The top six groups will then have the opportunity to present their projects to a panel of industry experts selected by the GBCSA and Growthpoint. A gala dinner and prize-giving will be held on 26 November to announce the overall winners.

Let's do Biz