Trees will also be planted in the areas around the properties, and there will be ‘insect hotels’ for bugs by the bike sheds.
In addition, electronic vehicle charging points will be installed across the estate to encourage occupiers to use these vehicles around the capital and the low emission zone.
The company also said the development’s energy supplies will be sourced from renewables, such as solar energy, on-site and off-site.
Councillor Gideon Bull at Haringey, which has approved the scheme, said Segro Park Tottenham “will attract business investment into the borough and create new job opportunities for the local community”.
Alan Holland, Segro’s managing director, Greater London, said: “The increasing demand from our customers and the wider market for space ever closer to the end consumer supports our decision to build this estate speculatively.”
Elsewhere in the property sector today, Investec Real Estate said it has agreed to provide investor Blue Coast Capital, and their development partners, with a £23.7 million loan to fund the development of 56 apartments.
The flats are on the site of the Grade-II listed former Richmond Royal Hospital.