Hungarian enterprise saving clean water worldwide!

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An arboretum in the heart of Budapest. Beneath it wastewater flows. All designed by the Hungarian company Organica, who are enthusiastic about clean water. They cleanse water with plants and microorganisms, as Forbes.hu reports.
Organica deals with wastewater cleaning on a moral, philosophical and economical basis.
The point of this technology is to cleanse wastewater and reuse waste by designing an ecosystem and food chain of bacteria, fags, snails and other organisms that consume human biological contamination. The majority of the work is done by the microorganisms. All this is happening in a pleasant green environment which even surrounds the offices of Organica’s buildings.
The enterprise has 90 major investments: 60 operating, 30 under construction. The founder is Attila Bodnár, who graduated from Budapest University of Technology as an architect. He has been designing public and residential buildings and churches for 21 years.
He soon became interested in complex ecological models.
He saw the growth of population as a challenge to sustainable development, especially concerning water supplies. He was thinking about an ecological and industrial solution that is also viable on the market.
He founded Organica by merging six minor companies in 2001. In six years, the reach of Organica exceeded Hungary and 33 Organica systems are in operation in France today.
Their primary aim is Asia, which faces the issues of sustainability the most critically.
Water usage is a vital problem in crowded cities. An average European citizen uses 150 liters of water a day, an American uses 300 and a Saudi uses 600. The most self-aware systems use cleansed water 50-60 percent. Clean drinking water is becoming a treasure. The new residential areas of Asian cities use a double aqueduct system: one for cleansed water and one for reused green water.





