Take a Look Inside McDonald’s Hong Kong’s New LEED Zero Carbon Restaurant in Tai Wo
A newly renovated McDonald’s restaurant in Hong Kong is setting an example for how more sustainable design can come to life in unexpected places. The Tai Wo location recently became Hong Kong’s first LEED Zero Carbon restaurant certified by the U.S. Green Building Council, and the design is expected to save 848.22 metric tons of CO2 at the restaurant, which is equivalent to planting more than 36,000 16-foot-tall trees.
It’s not hard to see why the building achieved LEED status: There are more than 20 sustainability efforts at work throughout the space. Thanks to a collaboration with eco-social startup HK TIMBERBANK, the exterior façade is crafted from local trees that have fallen due to typhoons or old age. Inside, furniture and décor are made with recycled materials.
To save energy, McDonald’s partnered with CLP Power Hong Kong to install a solar power system on the rooftop. Throughout the space, smart devices monitor energy consumption and indoor air quality to encourage staff and guests to be more eco-friendly. This McDonald’s restaurant has also signed a “green lease” with its landlord, Link Asset Management Limited, committing to sharing sustainability-related data and establish low-carbon operational guidelines.
The restaurant is also paying it forward by educating the next generation. Families can ride phone-charging bikes or play in the new education corner, which is stocked with sustainability-themed books. A new line of Happy Meal books and coloring games help young diners learn about environmental protection – from conserving energy to reducing carbon emissions.
This isn’t McDonald’s Hong Kong’s first foray into more sustainable practices. The business recycles used cooking oil, deploys more sustainable packaging, introduces more sustainable food choices, and actively reduces plastic use in restaurants and McCafés.
Many of these initiatives are on full display in the newly remodeled restaurant in Tai Wo. Take a look around the beautiful space above.
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