November-December 2009

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Acing the "Greening" Curve

As many colleges are located in areas where droughts and water shortages are front-page news, improved water efficiency is a major concern.

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Photo: @iStockPhoto.com/neotakezo

By Sue Marquette Poremba

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In addition, all of the plumbing fixtures are low-flow. The toilets, in fact, are pressure-assisted. “Air pressure helps to force out the water, so they have a strong flush with using very little water,” he says.

That is the main effort, to conserve water, but Gaston adds that the engineering students who live in the home have devised a way to cut down on the water used for showers. “We have a complex programmable lighting system in the house, so even the light switches in the house can be programmed to control any lights or groups of lights with timing features,” he says. “The students actually programmed the shower lights, so when you are taking a shower, the lights automatically go dim after three minutes to remind you to finish up and get out.”

The house is still relatively new, so it is still calculating the amount of water used by its residents. “We’re working to get digital pulse output meters on the city water so we can log that data,” explains Gaston. “What we’ve been doing until now is taking periodic readings. We are, however, monitoring the rain water data and that’s about 50 gallons a day.”

A building doesn’t have to be new construction to be a green building. Oregon State University (OSU) took its most recognizable campus building, Weatherford Hall, and renovated it into a LEED-certified structure.

Weatherford Hall, which was built in 1928, fell into failure and disrepair. It was no longer able to meet its needs, according to Dan Larson, associate director with University Housing and Dining Services. “The building is an icon for OSU,” says Larson. “It is the most photographed building on campus. It’s shown during televised athletic events.” 

In other words, it isn’t the type of building that is simply torn down and replaced with something new.

Private donations and bond funding were required to pay for the renovations to the residence hall, and, Larson says, a concept was necessary to attract those donations. “The concept came from a partnership between the College of Engineering, the College of Business, and University Housing and Dining to start up a residential college on entrepreneurship,” he says. Weatherford Hall houses students in that program.

Photo: Jim Gaston
Photovoltaic panels in the front transform sunlight into electricity, which powers the lights.

LEED-certifiable construction is a campus standard, but Larson says turning Weatherford Hall into a green building had other implications. “It was a high-profile renovation and a good way to kick-start campus expectations that buildings be renovated to LEED certifications.”

One of the first sustainable things done in the renovation process was recycling onsite. For example, Larson says, there was a dining center built in the 1960s that was attached to the original building. This was knocked down and the rubble from the demolition was used to fill in the foundation area, rather than haul in fill materials.

Other sustainable efforts were natural, simply due to modernization of the products. The electrical system in Weatherford Hall was old and unable to handle computers and other appliances today’s college students use; the new electrical system is much more efficient. Old windows were replaced with new, more energy efficient panes. Paint used is low VOC.

“We don’t have solar panels or a green roof,” admits Larson. “This project was more about the little things you can do to reclaim and recycle.”

A unique aspect of the project is in the landscaping. “We have what is called an eco-lawn,” explains Larson. “The mix of the lawn has a lot more clover and yarrow in it, which gives it a green look, but requires less irrigation. So we use much less water.”

The building also uses on-demand water heating. “The water is heated as it goes through the system, instead of holding 20 gallons of hot water,” he says.

It also has a recirculation line, so the water isn’t wasted from the tap, running until it gets warm enough. “You use less energy to heat the water, and you use less water,” adds Larson.

Low-flow showerheads are also in place, “but that’s a standard for us in all of our residence halls now,” he says. “We’re able to use less water, not because students are taking shorter showers, but because less water is coming through.”

One popular water efficient item OSU decided against was low-flush or waterless toilets. “Given what a lot of students choose to put down those toilets, we needed all the flow we could get,” he says.

All of the lights put into the building require less energy consumption. Daylighting is more difficult in a residence hall, which highlights the challenges—and differences—between building or renovating a dormitory and building a classroom or commercial building.

“In a classroom building, you want to take advantage of day light so you don’t have to use artificial lights as much,” says Larson. “But in a dorm building, you can do that in an area like an atrium or a lobby, but when you realize that every window is essentially a student’s room, you need to provide shade and privacy.”

At Point Park University in Pittsburgh, the new green building is designed especially for performance dance.

“We started looking about 10 years ago to build new dance facilities,” says Bill Cameron, vice president of operations. “The facilities we had were undersized and antiquated.”

The school officials took benchmarking trips to other educational institutions with dance studios to get ideas of what worked—and what didn’t—in order to design their new building.

“Early on in the planning, we decided that we wanted this building to be, at minimum, LEED silver-certified,” says Cameron. “It was Point Park’s first sustainable new building on campus.”

The school hired a company that focused on sustainability and monitoring LEED projects. “We assigned that company to be our watchdog during the process to ensure that we were reaching our goals,” says Cameron. “As we got through the design process, we discovered there were some things we could do at little extra cost to reach gold standard.”

The facility is 40,000 square feet and, in addition to its dance space, houses locker rooms and showers. The showerheads are all low-flow, while the toilets and urinals are low-flush.

Dance studios hold a special challenge when it comes to energy, according to Cameron. “Not only are we trying to save energy, but we need to make it comfortable for the dancers,” he says. “Dancers come in at the beginning of the class and warm up. Then they start to dance and emit body heat and humidity into the room.

“It’s a challenge to keep it comfortable enough for them to take off their sweats and wear only leotards while warming up, making sure the space isn’t drafty and cold, but quickly be able to maintain that temperature in the space when they start dancing,” he continues. “That cycle repeats itself five to seven times a day, as classes rotate.”

The HVAC systems use waterside economizers. “We have a cooling tower on the roof of the building,” says Cameron. “We have days in the spring and fall that have a moderate need for cooling.”

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The dance rooms, with 40 dancers in them, will begin to generate a heat load that requires cooling. Add to that, it isn’t unusual for dancers to spend five or more hours at the studio in a day.

“With the waterside economizer, what we are doing is instead of using mechanical cooling through an electrical chiller, we take the water circulating through the tower and extract cooling temperature water,” he says. The HVAC is also rigorously controlled by a Trane Tracer that allows staff to manage the building’s temperature levels. 


Author's Bio: Sue Marquette Poremba is a writer based in Pennsylvania.

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