Panattoni Europe plans further brownfield investments

Piotr Kocio?ek image

Panattoni Europe, market leader in industrial space, is stepping up its involvement in brownfield investments. The developer has created within its European structures a new position to focus on environmental studies – that of Environmental Director Europe, taken up by Piotr Kociolek. He will be responsible for implementing the developer’s strategy on the remediation of contaminated land previously used for industrial purposes.

 

The new move is intended to reinforce the developer’s policy on projects executed on industrial or post-industrial sites, i.e. the so-called brownfield investments. The aim of such investments is to redevelop previously abandoned or contaminated industrial or commercial sites and put them back into productive use. The conversion process of such areas and the remediation involved are often complicated in technical as well as legal terms.

 

Piotr Kociolek graduated from the Department of Chemistry of the University of Turin (Italy) and since then, throughout his thirty-year career, has been involved in environmental engineering. He has conducted environmental audits, notably those involving land and groundwater contamination, hazardous materials and substances present in buildings and installations. He is also a member of the Italian Association of Chemical Professionals and the Institute of Environmental Management and Assessment (IEMA) – a worldwide organisation established to promote best practice standards in environmental management, auditing and assessment. Piotr Kocio?ek will be responsible for the overall management and oversight of brownfield land, including any potential risks of contamination with materials hazardous for the environment: from managing the external consultants performing assessments and studies, through liaising with European operations, to implementing environment remediation strategies. He will operate in Poland, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Germany, and Romania.

 

“Panattoni Europe’s decision to step up its policy on brownfield investments was by no means accidental” – comments Robert Dobrzycki, Chief Executive Officer Europe, adding: “As a developer of industrial space, including BTS manufacturing facilities, we can boast a number of successful projects of this nature.” The first was the 30,492-square-metre BTS facility for Lear Corporation, which came into being through the reconstruction of an existing decaying facility in Legnica, at the Legnica Special Economic Zone. The redevelopment involved the adaptation of the facility and its infrastructure to the needs of its new tenant and produced a modern warehousing and manufacturing centre, which gave jobs to 800 people. The investment features a series of solutions dedicated to Lear’s specialised production process, including a side receiving dock, in-house paint shop, transformer stations and a press room. The factory for K-Flex Polska is another example – a modern warehouse was added to the existing 8,000-square-metre facility, doubling its size. At the same time, the entire façade got a facelift and the traffic layout adjacent to the property was modified.

 

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