Posts Tagged ‘green’

HKS Atlanta office – featured on Inhabitat.com

Friday, May 11th, 2012

The HKS Atlanta office renovation has been featured on the Inhabitat.com. The website is dedicated to the future of design and tracking innovations, technologies and materials that are pushing architecture and design towards a more sustainable future. HKS is recognized as a global architecture firm with a growing reputation for sustainable design. To add to our credentials, the office in Atlanta was awarded LEED Gold for Commercial Interiors.

Kudos to those who worked on this project!… our sustainable efforts are being recognized throughout the design community. See the link below for the full article, and more photos.

http://inhabitat.com/hks-atlanta-renovates-their-office-to-be-leed-gold-for-commercial-interiors/

Today is America Recyles Day

Tuesday, November 15th, 2011

November 15th is America Recycles Day, hosted by Keep America Beautiful. Over 5,000 people have already taken the pledge to LEARN about recycling options in their community and ACT to reduce their personal waste by choosing a new type of material to recycle each month. To learn more, visit http://americarecyclesday.org

4D Ecological Corridors

Wednesday, May 12th, 2010

Sustainable design is often on my mind. And, as developmental density increases, this idea of a 4D ecological corridor keeps popping into my head. In school we talked a bit about ecological corridors and in my few years of professional practice and work with the USGBC, I’ve managed to get a pretty good feel for what an ecological corridor is. An ecological corridor is a continuous path through an ecoregion along which plants, animals, and other organisms typical of the region can travel and develop. An ecological corridor is often mistaken as a strip of green stuff from point A to point B. It is much more than that.

The 4D part of the idea implies that rather than restricting the ecological development of our designs to a 2D site plan, we should consider the third “D”: the Z axis or height above and below the ground and the fourth “D” of time (or seasonal shifts). So, rather than creating designs that act like a rock in the middle of the living stream, even if the rock may have some nice moss growing on the north side, there should be increased integration with the life that naturally surrounds the project.

The rock-in-the-stream design is used quite often. Directing the ecoregion through the site and around the building can be very effective and beneficial to the environment. You have to be conscious to connect the dots as much as possible. Small parking islands or large parking lots can make the “rock” portion of the project unnecessarily large to the point of choking off or damming the stream of life with which we are trying to coexist.

Sometimes it may be appropriate to allow the ecoregion to flow through a building. This kind of design takes a lot of time and careful planning. (more…)

HKS & the Architecture 2030 Challenge

Tuesday, April 20th, 2010

What is the Architecture 2030 Challenge?  It’s a challenge issued by the non-profit Architecture 2030 to reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions produced by the building industry.  It is encouraged by the AIA and supported by the United States government.  The United States Energy Information Administration states that buildings are currently responsible for 48% of all annual energy consumption and GHG emissions, and that number is even greater globally.  Architects play a major role in addressing this issue.

So how is HKS doing its part towards the 2030 Challenge?  The first step is offsetting its own energy use by the use of 100% renewable energy certificates.  This money goes to the development of renewable energy sources, thereby reducing the demand on fossil fuels which produce the harmful gases.  Second, HKS is committing to energy efficient design.  Energy use can be reduced by understanding how design decisions correlate to a building’s energy demand.  We’re also tracking our projects.  By tracking it is possible to easily see were HKS stands in our efforts towards energy reduction. 

The next step in our commitment to the Challenge is developing more sustainable buildings.  It is certainly a challenge, currentlywe should be designing projects that now meet or exceed 60% energy reduction.  (The Challenge states:  60% in 2010; 70% in 2015; 80% in 2020; 90% in 2025; Carbon-neutral in 2030)  Some examples of how design can reduce energy in projects are:  understanding local climate, building orientation, sunshades, overhangs and vertical fins, optimal use of sunlight, efficient lighting, daylight sensors and various glazing measures.  These measures along with dedicated, knowledgeable clients and continuous development of tracking projects will help project HKS to the top, as a Sustainable Architecture Firm.

For more information visit the Architecture 2030 Challenge website.

We’re offsetting our electricity!

Thursday, April 8th, 2010

We have recently annouced that we are offsetting 100 percent of the annual electricity consumed at our 110,000-square-foot corporate headquarters, with the purchase of 4,300,000 kilowatt hours (kWh) of renewable energy credits (RECs) generated by wind farms across America through the Boulder, Colo.-based provider Renewable Choice Energy.

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency estimates that this purchase helps avoid a similar amount of CO2 emissions as produced by driving over 4.8 million miles in an average car, or the electricity use of 283 average American homes.

This agreement allows us to achieve points toward Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) certification and contributes significantly to large-scale renewable energy development.

Over seventy percent of U.S. electricity comes from fossil fuels such as coal and gas. Wind-generated electricity is renewable, sustainable and does not produce environmental pollution like other types of electricity generation. By purchasing RECs, wind energy producers add the same number of kilowatt hours of clean electricity to the national grid, reducing the overall need for fossil fuels and resulting in a cleaner and more sustainable environment. (more…)

Sustainability and Sociology

Wednesday, January 27th, 2010

There was a recent article in the New York Times reporting that therapists are seeing an increase in disputes over being “green.”  One partner may feel the other is not doing enough to save the environment or a parent may make decisions that affect the entire household; issues that put strain on a relationship in an attempt to do good.  (If you’re interested in reading the article it can be found here.)  After reading the article, I thought about how as architects and designers we often try and manipulate social behavior by way of the spaces we create and how these strategies can be changed to incorporate sustainability.

PrimitiveHut

 ”Primitive Hut” by Abbe Laugier.
Image source: http://www.usc.edu.

If we consider buildings prior to the mass deployment of HVAC systems that seal the inside of buildings from the outside environment, conditions such as temperature, light, smell and sound were driving factors in how people interact with each other and their built environment.  The hearth made the house a home, it was the place that was not only a source of heat but for daily gathering and sharing.  Architecture has long been considered a struggle for light; some of the best regarded and most emulated works have ingenious methods of achieving the proper balance of letting just enough light in and keeping harsh solar radiation out – the birth of the window.  These are but two of innumerable examples of the qualities that have been eliminated by the mechanical processes that control our indoor environments.  Early ideas of the roots of architecture have always been embedded in the natural environment; take for instance the depiction of the “primitive hut” by Abbe Laugier in the eighteenth century.  Today in the twenty-first century we now struggle with returning to the idea of the natural world as integral and not exiled from our buildings.

Thus the challenge becomes not only how do we design our buildings to be more sustainable, but how do we make sustainability work towards manipulating the experience of the spaces we design and the activities/interactions that take place there?  Do the interactions of white collar workers across America change because we eliminate sick building syndrome?  Do modern families once again sit together in peace to share dinner and discuss the day’s events without the interruption of television, Facebook, texting or telephone calls?  Well that’s another issue altogether, perhaps discussion for another day.

Biomimicry and Design

Thursday, January 21st, 2010

Image source: http://asknature.org

 

Recently, engineers and scientists faced with challenges are asking themselves the question “how would nature solve this problem?”  Doing so has helped some to come up with innovative and environmentally friendly solutions to some of the biggest challenges.

Almost all design challenges seem to have been solved by nature in very efficient and interesting ways as well.

The science of biomimicry is being embraced by many designers also, as it provides a vast vault of time-tested and proven natural solutions to a host of challenges.

AskNature.org is a beta open source project started by The Biomimicry Institute and sponsored by Autodesk Inc. to collect and organize all of nature’s 3.8 billion+ years of design and engineering brilliance and how some of this knowledge is currently being used by sustainability innovators.

Below are a few interesting resources and video links that I believe some designers might find pretty interesting and informative.

 

 

http://www.stocorp.com/webfiles.nsf/htmlmedia/lotusan/$file/long_md.wmv

http://asknature.org

http://www.biomimicryguild.com/indexguild.html

Greening your Thanksgiving

Monday, November 16th, 2009

With Thanksgiving coming up, I was thinking of what I can do to take advantage of the upcoming holiday to try being a bit more sustainable.  Here are some of my favorite opportunities for being sustainable at Thanksgiving:

Try and cook less.  Think about the amount of leftovers you had last year and try to downsize accordingly (especially if you ended up throwing any leftovers away). Cooking less can help your house stay at a more comfortable temperature.  If it gets too hot because of the cooking and extra bodies, open some windows before you turn on your air conditioner.  Chances are, it is nice outside. So take advantage of it.  You’ll end up saving not only on your cooking energy costs, but cooling energy as well.

I’m not a big one on going all organic with my food. . . maybe later in life. However, looking for food items that have less packaging, or environmentally friendly packaging could help. 

Use regular plates and dishes. . . yes, you’ll have to wash them, but there should be plenty of people around to help.

 If there aren’t plenty of people to help, think about inviting family, neighbors or friends over.  Thanksgiving is a great time for creating and strengthening relationships that increases our social sustainability.  It is a good opportunity to think of others and be thankful for what we have been giving by sharing.  Willingly sharing what we have been given is much more sustainable than being forced to share through social programs, laws etc.  So let’s care for each other as much as we’re trying to care for the planet.

Anyway, I hope you all have a great Thanksgiving.  I’m always thankful for the big HKS family.

Below is a fun image from the Washington Post.  The related article is located here.

GR2008112101361

A Carbon-Neutral, Zero-Waste City? Preposterous!

Thursday, October 29th, 2009

Masdar_City01_01Image from www.masdarpv.com

I attended (as I’m sure many of you did) the Architecture Forum featuring Lord Norman Foster at the new Dallas Performing Arts Center.  I was intrigued when he described Masdar City near the end of what was a very interesting lecture.  It seems that many were unaware of this development, the world’s first “Carbon-Neutral, Zero-Waste City”.   Foster compared this idea to when we put a man on the moon in the 1960’s.  Is this for real?  You bet….  Check out their website!

Up on the Roof

Monday, October 19th, 2009

NGM_Photograph by Diane Cook and Len JenshelPhotograph by Diane Cook and Len Jenshel via National Geographic

I’m an avid reader (and subscriber) of National Geographic.  Earlier this year in the May 2009 issue I discovered an interesting and thought-provoking article on Green Roofs.

Read the article here.