Peak Performance

Peak Performance

A Danish power plant that converts trash to energy just happens to also be a year-round ski slope. 

Welcome to CopenHill in Copenhagen, billed as the cleanest waste-to-energy power plant in the world. But it’s another aspect of the facility that has really captured people’s imagination: the 400m artificial ski slope on its roof.

A BIG idea 

Designed by Danish architecture firm BIG, CopenHill is a 90m tall structure with a blocky facade constructed from 1.2m and 3.3m wide aluminium bricks. Inside is a waste-treatment and energy-production tech capable of converting 440,000 tonnes of waste into clean energy annually –sufficient to provide clean electricity and district heating for 150,000 homes each year. 

Thanks to technology that removes pollutants from the exhaust, the roof area can be utilised for public activities. BIG decided to put the space to a unique use. 

As well as the ski slope, CopenHill also features tree-lined hiking trails and an 85m high artificial climbing wall – described as the world’s tallest – on its facade. For those who prefer après-ski activities, there’s even a rooftop bar and a calendar of events such as jazz and wine evenings. 

“CopenHill is so clean that we have been able to turn its building mass into the bedrock of the social life of the city,” says BIG founder Bjarke Ingels. “Its facade is climbable, its roof is hikeable and its slopes are skiable.” 

“What if sustainable cities and buildings actually are not about all the things you can’t do, but all the things you can do?”

Get hedonistic 

CopenHill is the embodiment of a term that Ingels coined: hedonistic sustainability. 

“Sustainability is always seen in the context of this urgent situation,” says Ingels. “The world is going down the drain; to be sustainable we can’t have the quality of life we are having now. It’s almost this protestant idea of taking cold showers in the morning, like it has to hurt to do good. 

“But what if sustainable cities and buildings actually are not about all the things you can’t do, but all the things you can do? What if a sustainable city or sustainable building actually has more opportunities, is more enjoyable, than the non-sustainable one? 

“Hedonistic sustainability teaches you that by thinking about sustainability, you’re also thinking about a city that’s more exciting and more fun to live in.” 

Copenhagen is aiming to become the world’s first carbon-neutral city by 2025. 

copenhill

The slope itself is made of Neveplast, a synthetic turf with a coefficient friction equal to snow.

Like to know more? 

To watch a video about CopenHill, click here. 

Ecolibrium – November 2022 cover

This article appears in ecolibrium’s November 2022 issue

Want to read more?

AIRAH MEMBERS

Click here to view our archive of issues and features.

NON-MEMBERS

Become an AIRAH member or subscribe to Ecolibrium.

Three cheers!

Three cheers!

The electrification of 3 Ravens brewery in Melbourne could serve as a blueprint for other craft operations, as Nick Johns-Wickberg discovers. If Melbourne is the hipster capital of Australia, then Thornbury might just be its hottest spot right now. Over the past few...

Legionella in a warming world 

Legionella in a warming world 

Clive Broadbent, L.AIRAH, discusses how climate change and increases in surface water temperatures could potentially encourage the growth of bacteria that prefer warm water (mesophiles), including Legionella.  A haunting metaphor  In classical mythology, the tale of...

Double trouble

Double trouble

Mark Lommers, M.AIRAH, looks at the repeal of Western Australia’s controversial Sewerage (Lighting, Ventilation and Construction) Regulations 1971, which for more than 50 years required the doubling up of toilet exhaust fans.  For many years, the legacy of Western...

A win-win for regional healthcare 

A win-win for regional healthcare 

The award-winning upgrade to Goondiwindi Hospital’s HVAC system has helped future-proof one of regional Queensland’s most important healthcare hubs. Anyone who has spent even one night in a hospital can appreciate how crucial HVAC&R is in a healthcare setting....

How to make money from batteries 

How to make money from batteries 

Craig Roussac from Buildings Alive looks at what investing in batteries can mean for building owners in Australia.Saving energy saves money and reduces greenhouse gas emissions. This fact has underpinned efficiency programs and driven investment returns for...

Howzat for heat monitoring?! 

Howzat for heat monitoring?! 

Nick Johns-Wickberg discovers how a heat monitoring tool developed by the University of Sydney is playing an important role in local sport. It’s 3:46pm on a Sunday and I’m standing at fine leg in 40°C heat. I’ve just bowled my fourth over on the trot, each ball coming...

Fairair

Advertisement