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Practice Makes Perfect
by Chris Brown AIA, LEED AP
Erin Reome LEED AP
March 9, 2010
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| Hood River, Ore., located in the Columbia River Gorge near Mt. Adams, gets ample sunshine for solar panels and with the help of a 14,000 gallon storage tank, enough rain to meet the new building’s water needs.
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Teachers at Hood River Middle School in Oregon had already
established a curriculum that incorporated sustainable concepts, so when a bond
was passed to build new music and science classrooms at their school, they knew
exactly what they wanted to do: use the new building as a ‘teaching tool’ that
would illustrate sustainable ideas put into practice.
Opsis Architecture began the process with an eco-charrette
that included teachers, students, designers and engineers. Together they set
goals for creating a building that was net-zero in both water and energy use.
While constrained by a modest budget, they also wanted to use sustainable
design techniques to help building users understand how the systems work and
how their actions are a critical component in the building’s use of resources.
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| Students
get hands-on experience growing food to sell at a farmer’s market and budget
energy use from on-site solar collection. |
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The new building incorporates not only a new music room,
practice rooms, teacher offices and a science lab but also includes a
greenhouse where students will learn with hands-on activities. The curriculum
will include growing plants using a ‘living machine’ that recycles
nutrient-rich wastewater from fish tanks for irrigation. Outside the
greenhouse, students will tend a seasonal garden, native plants, and orchard
trees to grow fruits and vegetables that they will sell to their community at
an on-site farmers market. To further strengthen the bond between school and
community, local organizations will also be able to share the building and site
facilities, such as the music room and adjacent outdoor amphitheater, when the
school is not using them.
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addition to the integration of sustainable technologies, remaining sensitive to
the context of the National Historic registered site is a high priority for the
project. The site includes this 1927 historic structure. |
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The project sits at the foot of a 1927 National Historic
Register building and will respond to this context through its use of similar
brick and formal expression. The brick veneer surrounds ICF (insulated concrete
formwork) walls. These, along with the R-38 roof insulation, below-slab
insulation, and triple-glazed windows, provide an airtight and well-insulated
building envelope with good thermal mass to serve as a buffer against outdoor
temperature swings. Sections of the wall and floor assemblies are exposed so
that students can see how they work. Students will also be able to observe
reused and recycled building elements such as the wood scissor trusses. The
trusses were salvaged from a 1940s era bus storage barn that was torn down to
make room for the new building.
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| A bus
storage barn that used to occupy the new building’s site was taken apart piece
by piece. Many of these materials set aside in the deconstruction will be used
in the new building, and 98 percent of all of the materials from the barn will
be re-used or recycled. |
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The goal of the project is to meet net-zero energy by
producing as much energy as the building uses. To reach this goal, energy
savings and production measures include geothermal heating; cooling using heat
exchange with water from an adjacent stream; a radiant slab; heat recovery
ventilators using displacement air distribution; and a plenum that sits under
the 35 kilowatt solar panel system, simultaneously preheating air for the building
and cooling the panels to make them more efficient.
The design team also performed daylighting studies to reach
an ideal combination of translucent skylights, monitor windows, traditional
windows, and deciduous vines on trellis shading devices. Together, these
elements create an even distribution of daylight in classrooms and allow
electric lights to be shut off much of the time.
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| Precast
concrete ornamentation, including a built-in sundial on the new building, will
blend with the character of the existing building’s terra cotta ornament. |
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But the final key to conservation will be the building’s
users. Part of the curriculum at the school will include managing a resource
budget and tracking the building’s performance through a ‘building
dashboard’--a website that tracks energy use and production, water use and
collection, and weather conditions. In addition, the natural ventilation system
is designed with a simple user interface to encourage students to think about
how they interact with the built environment.
The building will collect rainwater for use in toilets and
for irrigation, combined with low-flow and waterless plumbing fixtures.
Stormwater treatment will be done on-site using a bioswale with native
planting. While the net-zero water goal could not be met due to regulations
prohibiting on-site wastewater and potable water treatment, inquiries by the
design team have prompted regulators to re-examine their policies.
Working collaboratively with the administration and students
to set ambitious goals early on, the team was able to achieve a design that
will truly help the community’s next generation move toward a more sustainable
future.
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Chris Brown AIA, LEED AP Chris Brown, AIA, LEED AP, is an associate and architect at
Opsis Architecture in Portland,
Ore., specializing in the design
of educational facilities, building renovations, and sustainable design
strategies. Brown is a leading member of the Opsis Green Team, exploring ways
to improve building performance by improving architecture and engineering team
process and performance.
Erin Reome LEED AP Erin Reome, LEED AP, is the sustainable design coordinator
for Opsis Architecture, managing the in-house sustainability training, LEED
documentation and sustainability planning for numerous projects. A leading
member of the Opsis Green team, she is always seeking out new ways to integrate
sustainability into Opsis projects and practices.
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By: Heidi Seymour
Posted: March 3, 2010 12:52 AM
By: Chris Brown
Posted: March 17, 2010 7:36 PM
By: Heidi
Posted: April 14, 2010 11:47 PM
Do you have any idea why they cut down so many trees for this project? I was under the impression that tree removal would be minimal, but instead, they took out some beautiful old Douglas Firs.