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  • When it comes to sustainable architecture,

  • some of the most interesting examples

  • can be found in and around Amsterdam.

  • Here in the narrow streets at the historic old town,

  • you'd struggle to build anything new.

  • But I'm on my way to meet some architects who found

  • a way around that problem.

  • Hello.

  • Hello.

  • Architect Marthinj Pool is using possibly the most sustainable

  • method of all.

  • Repurposing buildings that already exist.

  • This way.

  • Let's go.

  • His team is transforming Amsterdam's old bridge houses

  • into hotel suites.

  • They were used for hundreds of years

  • to control the city's canals and waterways.

  • We love working with existing structures.

  • It is actually to open up a dialogue,

  • digging up about its past.

  • Modernising old buildings can be an expensive undertaking,

  • but it is more environmentally friendly.

  • Construction and demolition debris account

  • for the largest waste streams in terms of mass in the EU.

  • And that's before you get to the energy

  • costs of actually building.

  • Because that stored energy cost is...

  • it's something you can't see, it's not tangible,

  • but it is valuable, isn't it?

  • Actually it's a pity that carbon is not

  • measured in making a business case, but I do

  • believe that that's the way to move forward,

  • and whatever holistic appreciation

  • of the construction economic value,

  • historical value embodied energy in its materials.

  • The company that runs SWEETS hotel

  • is renting the Bridge Houses from the city for 20 years

  • as a financial investment.

  • So far they have 28.

  • I want to see another one.

  • I think that's it over there.

  • Doesn't look like much, although this

  • must be one of the coolest rooms in Amsterdam.

  • This one was built in the 1960s.

  • Wow.

  • A lot of glass.

  • The challenge is to create comfort and privacy

  • in a structure that was designed to do something else entirely.

  • Oh, the bridge is going up.

  • Wow.

  • The city is going on around us.

  • Maybe we need to change the way we think about hotel rooms

  • if we're going to be repurposing industrial buildings

  • into places to stay.

  • But can this idea of repurposing be used on a wider scale

  • to tackle, for example, the global housing shortage?

  • The Netherlands alone is facing a deficit

  • of nearly 300,000 homes.

  • These modular units in nearby Alkmaar

  • are designed to be repurposed and never demolished.

  • This lot are about to start their first life

  • as accommodation for young people, but when that's done,

  • they can be rejigged and even relocated.

  • So this is a studio flat for one person.

  • Yeah.

  • How could that be adapted or changed?

  • One thing you can do is you can link to,

  • and then you would have an apartment for elderly couple.

  • You can also make an office building out of it.

  • We always compared to giant Legos.

  • Giant Lego bricks with low carbon footprints.

  • They're made from sustainable wood rather than concrete.

  • It's a little bit cheaper or the same price as a traditional

  • build.

  • The advantage is that it's much faster, much more sustainable,

  • and it's much better quality.

  • It's certainly quick.

  • What's so incredible is that three weeks ago this

  • was just foundations.

  • There was no structure here at all.

  • That's correct.

  • And in three weeks' time, people will be moving it.

  • In a country where space on land comes at a premium,

  • the Netherlands has found another way.

  • This is an entire floating neighbourhood just outside

  • Amsterdam.

  • Almost a third of the country is situated below sea level.

  • So projects like this may be essential in creating

  • more housing.

  • We all know that sea water levels and river

  • levels are rising.

  • A lot of people live near the water.

  • Take for instance big cities, like Manila

  • in the Philippines or Jakarta in Indonesia,

  • they are being flooded.

  • They're sinking.

  • Nearly 100 homes are already here, and by the time

  • it's finished that number will have doubled.

  • Each unit is pulled into place by boat

  • and supported by buoyant concrete tubs.

  • So just 10 minutes from the centre of Amsterdam here.

  • The city centre is that way where everything is so compact,

  • but here it feels so spacious, so quiet.

  • I could definitely live here.

  • The projects I've visited suggest

  • there is no one blueprint for success.

  • Although they do all seem to be sacrificing low upfront

  • costs for something bigger.

  • Flexibility and adaptability for the future.

  • And from what I've seen the Netherlands

  • is definitely taking a lead role when

  • it comes to innovation driven by the demand for more

  • housing and the need to think imaginatively to create it.

When it comes to sustainable architecture,

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