|
|
New Environmental Center Creates Waves: Oberlin's Lewis Center Gains International AttentionAired September 15, 2000 A remarkable new classroom for sustainable living will be dedicated today at Oberlin College. The Adam Joseph Lewis Center for Environmental Studies is much more than an energy-efficient building. Designers say its mission is to change the way we think about our place in the natural world. Already a ripple effect has begun. Just months into its operation, the new building is attracting national and international attention from businesses, architects, and educators - and even the federal government. 90.3's Karen Schaefer reports. The Lewis Center in Oberlin doesn't look like a radical departure from typical college classroom architecture. The curved roof, overhanging eaves, and glass-walled atrium and greenhouse appear to be designed for style, not for function. But this is a building whose high-tech environmental design is turning heads around the globe. Dr. David Orr is director of the College's Environmental Studies Program.
Orr is a national figure in the new sustainability movement, an environmental approach to protecting future generations by changing the way we live now. The Lewis Center is his brainchild. Orr says his aim is to create a new design for living, one he believes is more sustainable than a system that relies on disappearing fossil fuels - and that poisons our children. The Lewis Center, he says, was created as a living model for a more sustainable future.
Orr says most of the Lewis Center's marvels - like photovoltaic roof panels that will eventually produce more energy than the building can use - are state-of-the-shelf technology already available to the average homeowner. Others - like the possibility of one day adding hydrogen fuel cells to partner the building's solar array - are more cutting edge. But perhaps the most startling - and most beautiful - innovation is the building's biological wastewater treatment system. Designed by ecological engineer John Todd, the system uses huge indoor tubs of floating vegetation to put the final polish on the building's closed-loop water recycling system. David Austen is with Living Technologies in Burlington, Vermont.
But it's not just the number of sustainable solutions under one roof that make the building unique. Last summer the American Institute of Architects gave the Lewis Center its Design Award for educational innovation. Steve Bingler is a Louisiana architect and a member of the review committee.
While many believe the Lewis Center is a remarkable achievement, the $7 million project is by no means finished. Orr and his staff are currently working with BP Solarex to improve solar efficiency and with NASA's Glenn Research Center to design hydrogen fuel cell systems. The U.S. Department of Energy is also involved. Because it was designed to incorporate future technological developments, David Orr says the building will continue to evolve as more businesses use the Center as a testing ground.
This afternoon dignitaries from across the U.S. will gather for the Lewis Center dedication. And on Saturday, the Center will host a day-long symposium on sustainable design. Invited speakers and guests include some of the leaders of the sustainability movement, among them the deputy director of the U.S. Department of the Interior, Center architect William McDonough, and William Ford, the Chairman of Ford Motor Company. In Oberlin, Karen Schaefer, 90.3 FM. Suggested Websites: |