Sustainability
Our Mission: Turning gray to green
Purpose
Rieder specializes in the manufacture of solution-oriented, eco-friendly and commercially viable concrete products. The greatest driving force behind the continuous development is the striving to create more than just sustainable concrete elements in order to allow us to make an active contribution to the energy revolution ourselves. The aim is to offer architects and builders an intelligent facade with countless possibilities in terms of aesthetics, flexibility of design, sustainability, and cost-effectiveness.
Responsibility
"The construction sector not only has the potential to make changes, it has a duty to do so. I don’t want to be accused of our generation being responsible for destroying our planet Earth. I could never forgive myself for not doing something de-spite my better knowledge. We have analysed our sustainability performance and worked out the CO₂ footprint of our company in order to identify important levers for a climate strategy. Now we are implementing our plan, evaluating the results and developing them further,” says Wolfgang Rieder, summarizing the timetable of his company’s expedition towards climate neutrality.
Reaching goals with self analysis
According to the 2019 state analysis, the company emits some 7,100 metric tons of CO₂ each year. As a result of our zero waste strategy, total CO₂ emissions in 2021 were around 4,515 metric tons. This means that to date, despite increasing output, the company has already saved 36% compared with 2019.
Our Strategy
The three pillars of the zero-waste strategy - 1/3 substitution, 1/3 more efficient processes, 1/3 offset measures - are the driving forces to achieve the transition to a climate-positive company.
Substitution
On its way to climate neutrality, Rieder developed Matrix 3.0, a CO₂-reduced material for sustainable facade elements. 50% of the conventional cement was replaced by local natural pozzolana. The rock flour, which has been used in the construction of buildings since ancient times, has excellent properties in terms of structural density and hardening. The cement substitution allows a CO₂ reduction of 30% compared with Matrix 2.2 and a reduction of 23% for the facade elements. It represents the preliminary stage to cement-free production.
Efficient processes
Rieder started a new projects to reduce waste in production. A waste analysis was used over a period of more than one year to determine what percentage of the material was suitable for reuse. Over 106,000 parts were read in; areas, boundaries, shapes, colors, and textures were decoded and then classed by size and shape. The potential shapes were used to develop the pixel product, a small-format shingle measuring 147 x 240 millimeters. Due to their small size, the elements open up entirely new design options for innovative building envelopes.
Offset
As part of its offsetting measures, 50,000 trees have already been planted in Canada to bind CO₂. The aim is to have planted half a million trees by 2025. Rieder chose old tree varieties and grows them together with local partners. These varieties are not only more resilient, they also bind more CO₂.
Green Report
Rieder became the first manufacturer of facades made of glassfibre reinforced concrete to publish a sustainability report for the 2021 financial year. In the Green Report, the company critically assessed itself and examined various business areas, focusing on the headquarters in Maishofen, Austria, and the production facility in Kolbermoor, Germany. The report was prepared in accordance with the international standards of the Global Reporting Initiative (GRI) and covers 15 topics. The evaluation assessed Rieder's potential impact on sustainability as well as on the relevance of the topics for stakeholders.
Reuse & Recycle
Building in the existing fabric - One example of how globally necessary changes can succeed is glemm21, the new headquarters in Maishofen, which is not strictly speaking a new building. “Using what’s there already rather than building something new is known to be the best way to save gray energy and reduce land sealing. And so, we tried it out on ourselves”, says Wolfgang Rieder.