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20120404_IMG_3880.jpg The Hyning in Grayrigg near Kendal Cumbria, UK is an old farmhouse and barns that is being converted into 8 holiday letting properties. The development is being finished to the highest environmental standards. The finished property will be of Passivhaus standard, super insulated with many renewable features. A ground source heat pump will provide heating for the properties with solar panels providing the power to operate the heat pump. All windows are tripled glazed. The property will harvest grey water for toilet flushing. The waste water goes through a series of bio digestors that purify the water to a standard where it can be fed straight back into an adjacent stream. This shot shows one of the insulated hot water cylinders
 
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20120404_IMG_3883.jpg The Hyning in Grayrigg near Kendal Cumbria, UK is an old farmhouse and barns that is being converted into 8 holiday letting properties. The development is being finished to the highest environmental standards. The finished property will be of Passivhaus standard, super insulated with many renewable features. A ground source heat pump will provide heating for the properties with solar panels providing the power to operate the heat pump. All windows are tripled glazed. The property will harvest grey water for toilet flushing. The waste water goes through a series of bio digestors that purify the water to a standard where it can be fed straight back into an adjacent stream. This shot shows one of the insulated hot water cylinders
 
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20120404_IMG_3885.jpg The Hyning in Grayrigg near Kendal Cumbria, UK is an old farmhouse and barns that is being converted into 8 holiday letting properties. The development is being finished to the highest environmental standards. The finished property will be of Passivhaus standard, super insulated with many renewable features. A ground source heat pump will provide heating for the properties with solar panels providing the power to operate the heat pump. All windows are tripled glazed. The property will harvest grey water for toilet flushing. The waste water goes through a series of bio digestors that purify the water to a standard where it can be fed straight back into an adjacent stream. This shot shows one of the insulated hot water cylinders
 
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20120404_IMG_3886.jpg The Hyning in Grayrigg near Kendal Cumbria, UK is an old farmhouse and barns that is being converted into 8 holiday letting properties. The development is being finished to the highest environmental standards. The finished property will be of Passivhaus standard, super insulated with many renewable features. A ground source heat pump will provide heating for the properties with solar panels providing the power to operate the heat pump. All windows are tripled glazed. The property will harvest grey water for toilet flushing. The waste water goes through a series of bio digestors that purify the water to a standard where it can be fed straight back into an adjacent stream. This shot shows one of the insulated hot water cylinders
 
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20120323_IMG_3194.jpg A solar water heating panel at a Green build centre in Kendal Cumbria, UK.
 
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20120323_IMG_3195.jpg A solar water heating panel at a Green build centre in Kendal Cumbria, UK.
 
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20120323_IMG_3199.jpg A poster showing green products at a Green Energy centre in Kendal Cumbria, UK.
 
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20120323_IMG_3206.jpg A solar water heating panel at a Green build centre in Kendal Cumbria, UK.
 
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20120323_IMG_3208.jpg A solar water heating panel at a Green build centre in Kendal Cumbria, UK.
 
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20120323_IMG_3209.jpg A solar water heating panel at a Green Energy Centre in Kendal Cumbria, UK.
 
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20120323_IMG_3212.jpg A solar water heating panel at a Green Energy Centre in Kendal Cumbria, UK.
 
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20120323_IMG_3213.jpg A solar water heating panel at a Green Energy Centre in Kendal Cumbria, UK.
 
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20120323_IMG_3219.jpg A solar water heating panel at a Green Energy Centre in Kendal Cumbria, UK.
 
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20120127_IMG_8406.jpg The Farmgen anaerobic bio digestor at Dryholme Farm near Silloth Cumbria, UK. The plant which cost £4.5 million, produces 1.2 Mw of electricity, enough to power 2000 households. It uses around 25,000 tons of feedstock annualy, mainly maize and grass, which is mixed with farm slurry and fed into the massive digestors where bacteria break it down. The resulting methane is what powers the electricity generator. The waste product can be spread on the land as a fertilizer, and there are also plans to dry it and sell as biomass boiler fuel. This shot shows hot water from the generator going to warm the digestors.
 
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20120127_IMG_8419.jpg The Farmgen anaerobic bio digestor at Dryholme Farm near Silloth Cumbria, UK. The plant which cost £4.5 million, produces 1.2 Mw of electricity, enough to power 2000 households. It uses around 25,000 tons of feedstock annualy, mainly maize and grass, which is mixed with farm slurry and fed into the massive digestors where bacteria break it down. The resulting methane is what powers the electricity generator. The waste product can be spread on the land as a fertilizer, and there are also plans to dry it and sell as biomass boiler fuel. This shot shows the hot water from the generator that is being fed into the digestors to keep the bacteria at a constant temperature.
 
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20120127_IMG_8423.jpg The Farmgen anaerobic bio digestor at Dryholme Farm near Silloth Cumbria, UK. The plant which cost £4.5 million, produces 1.2 Mw of electricity, enough to power 2000 households. It uses around 25,000 tons of feedstock annualy, mainly maize and grass, which is mixed with farm slurry and fed into the massive digestors where bacteria break it down. The resulting methane is what powers the electricity generator. The waste product can be spread on the land as a fertilizer, and there are also plans to dry it and sell as biomass boiler fuel. This shot shows the hot water from the generator that is being fed into the digestors to keep the bacteria at a constant temperature.
 
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20120127_IMG_8424.jpg The Farmgen anaerobic bio digestor at Dryholme Farm near Silloth Cumbria, UK. The plant which cost £4.5 million, produces 1.2 Mw of electricity, enough to power 2000 households. It uses around 25,000 tons of feedstock annualy, mainly maize and grass, which is mixed with farm slurry and fed into the massive digestors where bacteria break it down. The resulting methane is what powers the electricity generator. The waste product can be spread on the land as a fertilizer, and there are also plans to dry it and sell as biomass boiler fuel. This shot shows the hot water from the generator that is being fed into the digestors to keep the bacteria at a constant temperature.
 
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20120127_IMG_8427.jpg The Farmgen anaerobic bio digestor at Dryholme Farm near Silloth Cumbria, UK. The plant which cost £4.5 million, produces 1.2 Mw of electricity, enough to power 2000 households. It uses around 25,000 tons of feedstock annualy, mainly maize and grass, which is mixed with farm slurry and fed into the massive digestors where bacteria break it down. The resulting methane is what powers the electricity generator. The waste product can be spread on the land as a fertilizer, and there are also plans to dry it and sell as biomass boiler fuel. This shot shows the hot water from the generator that is being fed into the digestors to keep the bacteria at a constant temperature.
 
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20120127_IMG_8432.jpg The Farmgen anaerobic bio digestor at Dryholme Farm near Silloth Cumbria, UK. The plant which cost £4.5 million, produces 1.2 Mw of electricity, enough to power 2000 households. It uses around 25,000 tons of feedstock annualy, mainly maize and grass, which is mixed with farm slurry and fed into the massive digestors where bacteria break it down. The resulting methane is what powers the electricity generator. The waste product can be spread on the land as a fertilizer, and there are also plans to dry it and sell as biomass boiler fuel. This shot shows the hot water from the generator that is being fed into the digestors to keep the bacteria at a constant temperature.
 
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20120127_IMG_8437.jpg The Farmgen anaerobic bio digestor at Dryholme Farm near Silloth Cumbria, UK. The plant which cost £4.5 million, produces 1.2 Mw of electricity, enough to power 2000 households. It uses around 25,000 tons of feedstock annualy, mainly maize and grass, which is mixed with farm slurry and fed into the massive digestors where bacteria break it down. The resulting methane is what powers the electricity generator. The waste product can be spread on the land as a fertilizer, and there are also plans to dry it and sell as biomass boiler fuel. This shot shows the hot water from the generator that is being fed into the digestors to keep the bacteria at a constant temperature.
 
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20120127_IMG_8439.jpg The Farmgen anaerobic bio digestor at Dryholme Farm near Silloth Cumbria, UK. The plant which cost £4.5 million, produces 1.2 Mw of electricity, enough to power 2000 households. It uses around 25,000 tons of feedstock annualy, mainly maize and grass, which is mixed with farm slurry and fed into the massive digestors where bacteria break it down. The resulting methane is what powers the electricity generator. The waste product can be spread on the land as a fertilizer, and there are also plans to dry it and sell as biomass boiler fuel. This shot shows the hot water from the generator that is being fed into the digestors to keep the bacteria at a constant temperature.
 
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20120127_IMG_8444.jpg The Farmgen anaerobic bio digestor at Dryholme Farm near Silloth Cumbria, UK. The plant which cost £4.5 million, produces 1.2 Mw of electricity, enough to power 2000 households. It uses around 25,000 tons of feedstock annualy, mainly maize and grass, which is mixed with farm slurry and fed into the massive digestors where bacteria break it down. The resulting methane is what powers the electricity generator. The waste product can be spread on the land as a fertilizer, and there are also plans to dry it and sell as biomass boiler fuel. This shot shows the hot water from the generator that is being fed into the digestors to keep the bacteria at a constant temperature.
 
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20120127_IMG_8448.jpg The Farmgen anaerobic bio digestor at Dryholme Farm near Silloth Cumbria, UK. The plant which cost £4.5 million, produces 1.2 Mw of electricity, enough to power 2000 households. It uses around 25,000 tons of feedstock annualy, mainly maize and grass, which is mixed with farm slurry and fed into the massive digestors where bacteria break it down. The resulting methane is what powers the electricity generator. The waste product can be spread on the land as a fertilizer, and there are also plans to dry it and sell as biomass boiler fuel. This shot shows the pipe that carries the hot water that keep the bacteria at a constant temperature.
 
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IMG_3687_skip.jpg Gentoo house builder's Hutton Rise housing development in Sunderland, UK. Hutton Roof sets new standards in green build. Many of the houses are zero carbon, highly thermally efficient and incur minimal running costs.  All of the houses have either solar thermal water heating or solar electric panels, some have both,
 
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IMG_3701_green.jpg Gentoo house builder's Hutton Rise housing development in Sunderland, UK. Hutton Roof sets new standards in green build. Many of the houses are zero carbon, highly thermally efficient and incur minimal running costs.  All of the houses have either solar thermal water heating or solar electric panels, some have both,
 
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IMG_3713_passivhaus.jpg Gentoo house builder's Hutton Rise housing development in Sunderland, UK. Hutton Roof sets new standards in green build. Many of the houses are zero carbon, highly thermally efficient and incur minimal running costs. This passivehaus has 300mm wall cavities with super insulation standards. One boiler will heat 8 houses, and it is thought that the annual running costa for heat, light and water will be only £70 per house. The houses are 20 times more air tight than the current British standard. All of the houses have solar thermal water heating and many have solar electric panels.
 
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IMG_3722_green build.jpg Gentoo house builder's Hutton Rise housing development in Sunderland, UK. Hutton Roof sets new standards in green build. Many of the houses are zero carbon, highly thermally efficient and incur minimal running costs.  All of the houses have either solar thermal water heating or solar electric panels, some have both,
 
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IMG_3730_new build.jpg Gentoo house builder's Hutton Rise housing development in Sunderland, UK. Hutton Roof sets new standards in green build. Many of the houses are zero carbon, highly thermally efficient and incur minimal running costs.  All of the houses have either solar thermal water heating or solar electric panels, some have both,
 
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IMG_3813_south.jpg Gentoo house builder's Hutton Rise housing development in Sunderland, UK. Hutton Roof sets new standards in green build. Many of the houses are zero carbon, highly thermally efficient and incur minimal running costs.  All of the houses have either solar thermal water heating or solar electric panels, some have both,
 
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IMG_3826_construction.jpg Gentoo house builder's Hutton Rise housing development in Sunderland, UK. Hutton Roof sets new standards in green build. Many of the houses are zero carbon, highly thermally efficient and incur minimal running costs.  All of the houses have either solar thermal water heating or solar electric panels, some have both,
 
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IMG_3831_new build.jpg Gentoo house builder's Hutton Rise housing development in Sunderland, UK. Hutton Roof sets new standards in green build. Many of the houses are zero carbon, highly thermally efficient and incur minimal running costs.  All of the houses have either solar thermal water heating or solar electric panels, some have both,
 
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IMG_5741_green .jpg A green housing development on the outskirts of Sunderland in the North East UK. The housing has been constructed by Gentoo, with many of the buildings having solar electric and solar water heating on the roof.
 
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