Posts Tagged ‘Green Technology’

Baltimore’s Green Roof Renaissance

October 6th, 2009

Ed Dreiband claims to be afraid of heights, yet here he is, some twenty-five feet up, standing on the roof of his newly built Northwest Honda dealership in Owings Mills, looking like the king of the world.

From this vantage point high above busy Reisterstown Road, Dreiband can survey all 28,500 square feet of the building’s innovative “green roof,” made of living, growing plants.  The green roof is the centerpiece of Northwest Honda’s eco-friendly auto facility, which opened in August.

“The plants have grown some since my last visit,” says Dreiband, who led this reporter on a semi-perilous climb up a narrow, indoor ladder, before opening a steel hatch that leads onto the roof.
Dreiband walks gingerly, careful not to tread upon neatly manicured rows of tiny plants—some 57,000 in all—that nearly cover the roof.  “They don’t really require much work,” Dreiband explains.  “When it rains, they’re watered.  That’s what’s so great about this—the environmental benefits and the practicality.”

Green roofs are vegetated covers where growing plants replace traditional roofing materials.  Experts like Garth Rockcastle, dean of the School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation at the University of Maryland, College Park, say they’re gaining favor as a smart, sustainable design trend.

“For the past fifteen years [in college architecture programs] there’s been an evolution in terms of teaching more ‘green’ concepts,” says Rockcastle.  “Today, it’s considered standard.”

The need and the demand for eco-friendly construction have increased due to factors such as global warming, higher rates of air and water pollution, and a growing population.  Green roofs can help lessen urban development and suburban sprawl issues, while creating environmental, economic, and aesthetic benefits.

Environmentally, the myriad benefits include reduced effects on the ozone, fewer toxins in drinking water, and improved air quality.  While green roofs usually entail higher initial costs, their economic advantages typically include decreased energy usage and utility costs (particularly in heating and cooling).  Among the aesthetic benefits are visually pleasing native and naturalized plantcommunities.

Dreiband says he first read about eco-friendly construction in USA Today and Ward’s DealerBusiness, a trade publication for car dealers.  He and his wife, Ina, also own BMW and Suzuki dealerships, all along the 9700 block of Reisterstown Road.

“When we began working on the new building, I asked our architect about it,” says the 62-year-old accountant turned car dealer, whose two sons Josh and Danny help him manage a team of two hundred.  “We found out that we could do it, and went from there.”

Architects Peter Powell and Rob Gordon of Beck, Powell & Parsons in Towson designed the new $12 million facility, set on four acres that formerly housed Baltimore County police department offices.  (The land was purchased from the county in 2001 and the groundbreaking occurred in January 2006.)

The new building replaces the old Northwest Honda site across the street (which will be used to expand the family’s BMW dealership), and is designed to preserve energy and utilize recycled materials in a variety of ways.

“[Dreiband] has always had an interest in energy conservation, both as an environmental concern and a cost-saving measure,” says Powell.  “We’d done residential and commercial [green] buildings, but never a green roof on a commercial building.  It was an exciting project.”

The results are impressive. The sprawling 40,000 -square -foot dealership is painted white with cool blue accents, giving it a light, airy feel. It can accommodate up to five hundred cars.

The building has eighty-seven energy-saving insulated glass panels, and its main heating source comes from furnaces that use recycled oil from cars.  Throughout the building, automatic sensors turn lights on and off as people enter and exit rooms; meanwhile, exterior lights are controlled by so-called “photoeyes” that turn lights on based on the percentage of available light, and turn them off based on time clocks to reduce unnecessary usage.

To service cars, there are twenty-nine vehicle bays in the service center, and the dealership’s on-premise carwash recycles water between washes—about 2,500 to 3,000 gallons daily.

As for the building’s green roof—which actually has what architect Rob Gordon describes as a “thermo-plastic polyolefin membrane (TPO) roof” underneath to keep the interior of the building dry—it is a blend of both form and function.  For starters, the green roof extends the life of a traditional roof, according to the lead architects, who collaborated on the project with landscape architect Thomas J. Hoff (who secured the approval from Baltimore County to install the green roof), various engineers, builders, county officials, and others.

Having multiple layers protects the TPO roofing membrane from ultraviolet rays, wind, and the extremes of temperature fluctuations.  “The green roof keeps the TPO cooler, and this reduces the ‘heat island effect’ of a black roof, which would otherwise contribute to global warming,” explains Powell.

The green roof also meets the county’s required storm water management system requirements, says Robert Alexander Wirth, a professional engineer and manager of storm water engineering for the county’s Department of Environmental Protection and Resource Management.

“When you disturb more than five thousand square feet [of land], you are required to address storm water management,” he explains. “Because of site constraints, such as clay soil under the ground, they had to come up with an alternative storm water practice. There’s a whole menu of items you can choose—from a storm water retention pond to underground facilities. They chose to do this green roof.”

Wirth says according to the plans submitted to the county, estimates were that the roof would cost a little under $400,000.

A green roof typically has drought-tolerant plants (in this case, most are a hardy species known as sedum in six different varieties) that help reduce, filter, and cool storm water run-off. That in turn can protect sewer systems and watersheds, and help prevent potentially hazardous levels of toxins from entering waterways such as the Chesapeake Bay and affecting food sources like fish.

While Dreiband says safety and insurance issues preclude the public and customers from going up to the roof, the project has garnered positive attention for the dealership.  Besides being what Wirth called “unique” in Baltimore County, it may also be the first Honda operation nationwide with such design elements, according to company officials in Torrance, California.

“It is certainly one of the first to incorporate so many environmental facility features into the overall design philosophy of the dealership,” says Chris Martin, a spokesman for American Honda Motor Co., Inc.

“We’re thrilled about the new building and the chance to operate in an environmentally conscious manner,” says Dreiband, who resists labeling himself an “environmentalist.”

“I can’t take care of the whole world, but this makes me feel good.  I have grandchildren, and many of the people on my team have children.  We want to leave them a healthy environment.  We only have one earth.  We all share it.”

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City of NO Cars

August 29th, 2009

http://gmy.news.yahoo.com/vid/15288400/

On Energy, Obama Finds Broad Support

August 28th, 2009

Poll Shows Backing for Reform Efforts, But Cap-and-Trade Bill Is Harder Sell:

Most Americans approve of the way President Obama is handling energy issues and support efforts by him and Democrats in Congress to overhaul energy policy — including the controversial cap-and-trade approach to limiting greenhouse gas emissions, according to a Washington Post-ABC News poll.

Even as public support has slipped for Obama’s health-care proposals, support for ambitious changes in energy policy has been steady.  Although the issue of health care arouses more intense feelings than energy policy does, those who do feel strongly about energy and climate policy tend to tilt toward the administration’s position and a broad majority of people echo Democratic lawmakers’ views on the benefits of proposed changes.

Nearly six in 10 of those polled support the proposed changes to U.S. energy policy being developed by Congress and the administration.  Fifty-five percent of Americans approve of the way Obama is handling the issue, compared with 30 percent who do not.  A narrower majority, 52 to 43 percent, back a cap-and-trade system; that margin is unchanged since June. A cap-and-trade system would set a ceiling for the nation’s greenhouse gas emissions, and it would allow firms to buy and sell emissions permits.

“Something definitely has to be done,” said Marian Eldridge, a former legal secretary from East Windsor, N.J., who participated in the survey.  ”Anything’s worth a try at this point.”  She said she tries to “ignore the politics; you get discouraged.”  But she said that higher energy costs were “inevitable” and that “we’re too dependent on other countries.”

Despite public support for an energy and climate bill, the prospects for legislation remain uncertain.  The House narrowly passed a measure in June, but not before inserting a multitude of provisions for consumers, interest groups and corporations.  The Senate remains divided over how to move forward, and getting 60 senators to back an end to debate could be difficult.  Adding to that challenge is the thin public support for the cap-and-trade approach if it were to raise consumers’ costs.  Although 58 percent of those polled would support the plan if it reduced greenhouse gas emissions and cost them an extra $10 a month, support drops to 39 percent if new monthly costs reached $25.  Moreover, the Senate’s calendar is crowded with legislation on a variety of matters, including health care, appropriations, an increase in the debt ceiling and the extension of a nuclear weapons treaty with Russia.

Effect on Jobs

Majorities of those surveyed say changes in energy policy would address global warming and not raise energy costs.  Although many proponents of a cap-and-trade bill say it could spur job creation in the renewable-energy sector and foes say it would drive jobs overseas, a plurality of Americans — more than four out of 10 — think that the legislation would have no effect on employment in their states.  Fewer than one in five say that the reform efforts would lead to job losses; more than twice as many see added jobs.  GOP criticism of the House energy and climate bill appears to have primarily influenced Republicans themselves.  Among Republicans, support for cap-and-trade legislation has dipped from 45 percent to 37 percent since a poll taken in June.

“It will make the cost [of energy] go up too high for people,” said Mary Lou Pomeroy, an elementary school teacher’s assistant in Renton, Wash., near Seattle.  ”I think there’s a lot of people struggling and seeing their income reduced, and we don’t need things that cost more.  I’m just not sure that’s our biggest issue. . . . I think health care right now is bigger. or the huge deficit.”

Support for the plan among independents has increased slightly, with a narrow majority now in favor.  Overall, a slight majority of those polled say changes to energy policy would help address global warming, while a third say they will not.  A slim 5 percent volunteered that global warming is not an issue.

Obama’s goal of putting 1 million electric cars on the road by 2015 strikes a chord.  More than eight in 10 people say they support the development of electric car technology.

Some people see the government’s Cash for Clunkers program as a symbol of energy policy, even though it is separate from the comprehensive House legislation.  Nearly seven in 10 backed using cash rebates to encourage people to buy more fuel-efficient cars .

Eldridge, the New Jersey resident, said, “I think the clunker thing was a good idea.  It helped get some garbage off the roads.”  Pomeroy, however, predicted that many people who traded in clunkers would be unable to make payments on their new cars. And she viewed the government’s difficulty in getting payments to dealers as symptomatic of government involvement in the economy.  ”I don’t think our government is all that great at efficiency,” she said.

Energy Sources

The public’s preferences regarding energy sources to meet the nation’s needs remain mostly the same as they were at the start of the decade, with a modest uptick in support for new nuclear power plants and a decline in support for building oil-, coal- or natural gas-fueled plants.

Solar and wind power enjoy near-universal support; nine in 10 people support further development.  More than eight in 10 favor requirements for greater fuel efficiency.  Broad majorities also favor requiring increased energy conservation from businesses and consumers.

Fifty-two percent favor building more nuclear power plants, but that support drops to 35 percent if the new plants were within 50 miles of the respondent’s home.  Support for building nuclear plants is up about six percentage points since 2001.

The poll was conducted Aug. 13-17 among a random national sample of 1,001 adults. The results have a margin of error of three percentage points.

By Steven Mufson and Jennifer Agiesta

Polling director Jon Cohen contributed to this report.

Why the Microgrid Could Be the Answer to Our Energy Crisis | Fast Company

August 9th, 2009

Why the Microgrid Could Be the Answer to Our Energy Crisis | Fast Company.

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