Next stage of Jabłoniowa Aleja investment in Choroszcz, carried out by Unihouse SA on behalf of Polskie Domy Drewniane, has come to end. All the houses have been assembled, and the construction team still has to finish the finishing works and connect installations. On this occasion, the topping out ceremony took place.
The investment consists of ten two-family houses and one service building - all of them are made in the panel technology, which allowed to significantly reduce both the duration of the entire investment, as well as financial and environmental costs.
-The topping out ceremony has a symbolic dimension. It is an opportunity to thank investors, contractors, designers and other people involved in the construction and to sum up the entire project. A joint celebration due to the COVID-19 pandemic was not possible, but we hope to meet on the occasion of the closing of the entire investment
– says Marcin Gołębiewski, CEO of Unihouse SA.
On the occasion of the assembly of the last building in Choroszcz, a topping-out ceremony was organised - a wreath decorated with multicoloured ribbons which was hung in the upper part of one of the buildings. The wreath is and was hung for good luck - to this day some believe that its absence will bring bad luck to the building and its owners.
- The mission of our company is to promote timber construction and facilitate access to quality and affordable housing. Modern wood construction offers a number of advantages that other methods of construction are not able to provide. Above all, its ecological dimension speaks in favour of this technology. A major part of the work in Choroszcz, that is the whole prefabrication process, is carried out in Unihouse factory. This translates directly into perfect precision, shorter construction time and reduced environmental costs, energy consumption and greenhouse gas emissions. Timber frame houses respond to the challenges posed by climate change to the modern construction industry. Let us remember that each cubic meter of wood absorbs as much as 1 ton of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere
– says Tomasz Szlązak, CEO of Polskie Domy Drewniane S.A.
The estate will have rainwater tanks for watering the greenery. Each apartment will be equipped with mechanical ventilation with heat recovery (recuperation),
And the roofs of the buildings will be adapted for mounting 5kW photovoltaic panels. This will translate into lower maintenance costs.
The official sale will start already in June, and the completion of the entire investment is planned for
in the third quarter of this year.