BedZED, the cutting-edge housing project created by the group BioRegional, while an overall success, is having some difficulties, particularly with the living machine that handles its waste. Hard to tell how much of this involves the inevitable shake-down problems associated with any innovation and how much is poor design showing through:
Meanwhile, the other linchpin of BedZed's ethos - its Living Machine, which uses reed beds to filter sewage water for use in toilets and gardens - has been out of operation for the past seven months because the Peabody Trust, the housing association that commissioned BedZed from BioRegional Development Group, an entrepreneurial, independent environmental organisation, could not afford to replace the operator. ... [But] Thames Water agreed to take over the Living Machine and run it alongside new technology from the US. It is due to move in to BedZed later this year. Additionally, Dunster says, a replacement technology to provide heat and power from biomass has been identified to fill the gap left by the failed combined heat and power (CHP) system, which was so unreliable that Peabody installed gas boilers after the first winter. Dunster says he is now talking to the Greater London Authority's Climate Change Agency and the Carbon Trust about funding for the new system. "If things go well, there's a good chance we'll have the plant replaced in time for winter," he says.
We'll be following this closely.









