flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

At Penn State, sustainability is more than a goal

Sustainability

At Penn State, sustainability is more than a goal

The university, encompassing 13 colleges and 24 campuses, adheres to protocols established by the UN.


By John Caufield, Senior Editor | September 10, 2018

The Morningstar solar house is one of the features at Penn State's Sustainability Experience Center, where the university is contemplating a permanent structure for classrooms, research labs, and offices that would be built to Living Building Challenge standards. Image: Patrick Mansell

This fall, Penn State University could start site planning for the first commercial building at its Sustainability Experience Center, a 9.5-acre destination near famed Beaver Stadium in State College, Pa., which features technologies and facilities designed to support sustainability education.

The Sustainability Experience Center, whose origin dates back to the early 2000s, currently includes a solar house, greenhouse, community gardens with nearly 100 plots, power plant, and wind turbines. In 2009, Penn State added an Eco Machine, a series of tanks teeming with live plants, trees, grasses and algae, koi and goldfish, tiny freshwater snails, and diverse microorganisms and bacteria, all of which are designed to eat and break down waste to create clean water.

Penn State is also home to The Sustainability Institute, founded in 2013, which supports sustainability efforts for the university’s 13 colleges and 24 campuses through student and staff engagement, curriculum development, community projects, operations, and research. The Institute’s work plan is based on the 17 sustainable goals that the United Nations has agreed upon. Those objectives—11 of which are socially oriented—comprise the framework, with indicators and metrics, for the university’s sustainable programs.

“Our goal is to put Penn State and Pennsylvania on the map as global sustainability leaders,” says Paul Shrivastava, the university’s Chief Sustainability Officer and Director of The Sustainability Institute. He notes that Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Wolf is also the chancellor of the university, which as a land-grant school is obligated by law to be a steward of the environment. “We are taking a Commonwealth approach,” says Shrivatava.

An academic entrepreneur, Shrivastava came to Penn State about a year ago from Future Earth, where he was Executive Director of this global research platform with 50,000 employees that coordinates new, interdisciplinary approaches toward sustainable transformations.

During his tenure with Future Earth, one of the construction projects Shrivastava was involved in was a 13-story, LEED Gold-certified building in Montreal that, he now concedes, “was obsolete the minute it opened” from a sustainability standpoint because it didn’t fully take into account the environment surrounding it. That taught Shrivastava that “no building alone can promote sustainability. Buildings must be part of larger eco systems,” he says.

The 21,500-sf Gary Schultz Child Care Center at Hoyt Woods on Penn State's University Park campus is LEED Platinum certified. LEED is now the minimum standard for all new construction on the university's 24 campuses. Image: Patrick Mansell

 

For a place as vast as Penn State, that’s easier said than done. Over the past several years, every new building has met LEED standards at a minimum, and there are several LEED Silver-, Gold-, and Platinum-certified buildings on its campuses.

The building being considered for the Sustainability Experience Center would meet more-rigorous Living Building Challenge standards. “We are already thinking ‘eco system’ here,” he says. The building—which would include classrooms, labs, and offices—requires fundraising to initiate design and construction, so if all went as planned it probably would take five years before it’s up and running, says Shrivastava. (The university has yet to select AEC firms for this project.)

Meanwhile, Penn State continues to move forward on its sustainability path. Each college’s dean and each campus’ chancellor is responsible for guiding that journey through mentoring, identifying standards, and bringing resources to the table. (Penn State, whose annual budget is $5.6 billion, also owns an airport and hotels, “so there are a lot of moving parts,” says Shrivastava. He adds that the university’s sustainability framework is broad enough to accommodate difference campuses’ needs. “There’s no ‘one size fits all.’ ”)

Paul Shrivastava, Penn State's Chief Sustainability Officer, is striving to make the university and the state  of Pennsylvania global hubs for sustainability that goes beyond building construction to incorporate social goals. Image: Penn State University

 

The university is also working with the private sector. Shrivastava points, by way of example, to PepsiCo, the multinational food and beverage supplier, which has an exclusive contract with Penn State. Shrivastava says that PepsiCo has agreed to invest $100,000 per year for the next 10 years to support sustainable ventures such as a student farm.

He adds that building and construction companies “are always wanting to use Penn State to test new technologies.” These have included Siemens and Bechtel. And developers “are eager to support this kind of phenomenon.”

Related Stories

| Feb 4, 2011

U.S. Green Building Council applauds President Obama’s Green Building Initiative

The U.S. Green Building Council applauded a key element of President Obama’s plan to “win the future” by making America’s commercial buildings more energy- and resource-efficient over the next decade.  The President’s plan, entitled Better Buildings Initiative, catalyzes private-sector investment through a series of incentives to upgrade offices, stores, schools and universities, hospitals and other commercial and municipal buildings.

| Feb 4, 2011

President Obama: 20% improvement in energy efficiency will save $40 billion

President Obama’s Better Buildings Initiative, announced February 3, 2011, aims to achieve a 20% improvement in energy efficiency in commercial buildings by 2020, improvements that will save American businesses $40 billion a year.

| Jan 25, 2011

Bloomberg launches NYC Urban Tech Innovation Center

To promote the development and commercialization of green building technologies in New York City, Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg has launched the NYC Urban Technology Innovation Center. This initiative will connect academic institutions conducting underlying research, companies creating the associated products, and building owners who will use those technologies.

| Jan 25, 2011

InterContinental Hotels Group gets LEED pre-certification

InterContinental Hotels Group, the world's largest hotel group by number of rooms, announced that its in-house sustainability system Green Engage has been awarded LEED volume pre-certification established from the USGBC and verified by the Green Building Certification Institute. IHG is the first hotel company to receive this award for an existing hotels program.

| Jan 21, 2011

Combination credit union and USO center earns LEED Silver

After the Army announced plans to expand Fort Bliss, in Texas, by up to 30,000 troops, FirstLight Federal Credit Union contracted NewGround (as CM) to build a new 16,000-sf facility, allocating 6,000 sf for a USO center with an Internet café, gaming stations, and theater.

| Jan 21, 2011

Manufacturing plant transformed into LEED Platinum Clif Bar headquarters

Clif Bar & Co.’s new 115,000-sf headquarters in Emeryville, Calif., is one of the first buildings in the state to meet the 2008 California Building Energy Efficiency Standards. The structure has the largest smart solar array in North America, which will provide nearly all of its electrical energy needs.

| Jan 21, 2011

Primate research facility at Duke improves life for lemurs

Dozens of lemurs have new homes in two new facilities at the Duke Lemur Center in Raleigh, N.C. The Releasable Building connects to a 69-acre fenced forest for free-ranging lemurs, while the Semi-Releasable Building is for lemurs with limited-range privileges.

| Jan 21, 2011

Sustainable history center exhibits Fort Ticonderoga’s storied past

Fort Ticonderoga, in Ticonderoga, N.Y., along Lake Champlain, dates to 1755 and was the site of battles in the French and Indian War and the American Revolution. The new $20.8 million, 15,000-sf Deborah Clarke Mars Education Center pays homage to the French magasin du Roi (the King’s warehouse) at the fort.

| Jan 21, 2011

Virginia community college completes LEED Silver science building

The new 60,000-sf science building at John Tyler Community College in Midlothian, Va., just earned LEED Silver, the first facility in the Commonwealth’s community college system to earn this recognition. The facility, designed by Burt Hill with Gilbane Building Co. as construction manager, houses an entire floor of laboratory classrooms, plus a new library, student lounge, and bookstore.

| Jan 20, 2011

Construction begins on second St. Louis community center

O’Fallon Park Recreation Complex in St. Louis, designed by local architecture/engineering firm KAI Design & Build, will feature an indoor aquatic park with interactive water play features, a lazy river, water slides, laps lanes, and an outdoor spray and multiuse pool.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category

Green

Global green building alliance releases guide for $35 trillion investment to achieve net zero, meet global energy transition goals

The international alliance of UK-based Building Research Establishment (BRE), the Green Building Council of Australia (GBCA), the Singapore Green Building Council (SGBC), the U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC), and the Alliance HQE-GBC France developed the guide, Financing Transformation: A Guide to Green Building for Green Bonds and Green Loans, to strengthen global cooperation between the finance and real estate sectors.



Products and Materials

Top products from AIA 2024

This month, Building Design+Construction editors are bringing you the top products displayed at the 2024 AIA Conference on Architecture & Design. Nearly 550 building product manufacturers showcased their products—here are 17 that caught our eye.


halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021