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Posted: February 3, 2010
Forget the notion that going green is merely hip. Administrators have an
arsenal of reasons to advocate for environmentally friendly building design and
operation. A green school is healthier. It can improve student performance and
provide hands-on learning opportunities. Most importantly: Going green saves
money, big time. Read More...
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Posted: January 29, 2010
NorthWrite and its reseller partner, Smart Buildings, Inc., today announced
that they have been selected by the State of Idaho’s Office of Energy Resources
to provide NorthWrite’s unique wireless monitoring and web-based Energy Expert
software services to support the state’s K-12 School Efficiency Program. The
Idaho project is providing HVAC tune-ups and select retrofits for each of the
700+ K-12 classroom buildings in Idaho. Read more...
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Posted: Sept. 7, 2009
Buckets for food waste in the school cafeteria. Ceramic plates, bowls and mugs instead of Styrofoam. Energy-efficient light bulbs and geothermal heating and cooling system. A growing number of Nashville's public and private schools have been spending money on those and other environment friendly projects, going beyond just teaching about them in classrooms. Some already have seen returns on their investment. Read More...
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Posted: Sept. 4, 2009
APPLETON, Wis. – River Crest Elementary School in Hudson, Wis., recently received the designation of LEED Gold from the U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC), the nation's foremost authority on green buildings. Hoffman LLC, an Appleton, Wisconsin-based planning, architectural, and construction management firm, designed and built the highly-sustainable and eco-friendly school. Read More...
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Posted: Aug. 3, 2009
It's expected to be the greenest school in Minnesota. Construction crews are busy putting the finishing touches on the new George W. Gibbs Elementary. Read More...
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Posted: Aug. 1, 2009
In 1993, Wal-Mart conducted an experiment in daylighting in its new Lawrence, Kan., store. In one half of the store, lights were switched off, and sunlight was allowed to stream down from a vast ceiling of skylights onto the merchandise below. In the other half, there were no skylights, and the store was illuminated solely by "artificial" fluorescent lighting. Otherwise, the two halves of the store were identical, with the same merchandise on display -- in other words two parallel universes with different lighting sources. Read More...
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Posted: July 22, 2009
CHICAGO – Classrooms in Chicago's Tarkington School of Excellence are equipped with natural light sensors, temperature-regulating windows and acoustically sound walls. It's easier for students to learn in a school that focuses on environmental awareness and education, said school officials. Read More...
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Posted: July 20, 2009
DEKALB COUNTY, Ga. – The school year starts in just three weeks for many metro area public schools. In southeast DeKalb County, the doors will open on a brand new, environmentally-friendly high school that will be the first of its kind in Georgia. Read More...
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Posted: July 10, 2009
You don't have to spend a lot of time searching the Internet to find study after study proclaiming the benefits of so-called green schools — facilities that create healthy, learning-conducive environments while saving energy, resources and money. Reports of improved test scores and reduced student absenteeism caused by illness come from all regions of the country. Read More...
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Posted: June 14, 2009
PHOENIX, Ariz. — Green building is not just about saving energy. In the Murphy School District, it is also helping to build a healthy community. My district is in one of the toughest and grittiest neighborhoods in Phoenix. We have a documented rising incidence of asthma and pulmonary problems. Read More...
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Posted: Jan. 13, 2009
Scotland's schools are to become greener under a new Government initiative to promote renewable energy and energy efficiency. Read More...
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Posted: Oct. 20, 2008
GERMANTOWN, Md. — On the outside, Great Seneca Creek Elementary School looks much like any other. But inside, it is unmistakably green. Read More...
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Posted: Sept. 30, 2008
MARTINSBURG, W.Va. — Construction of West Virginia's first "green" public school - in northern Berkeley County - should begin next spring, state and county officials confirmed Monday. Read More...
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Posted: Sept. 24, 2008
It's difficult to think of a skyscraper – the ultimate inanimate object – as having much to do with environmentalism. But the concept of green building has arrived – if not front and center in Washington, at least in the minds of a diverse coalition of green activists. As part of TNR (The New Republic) TV's series on contemporary environmentalism, this episode explores how the concept of sustainable design has leapt from the pages of glossy magazines like Vanity Fair to the long-term planning of corporations, real estate developers large and small, and an increasing number of everyday Americans. Read More...
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Posted: Sept. 8, 2008
A trade group that promotes green building design is urging state legislatures to form caucuses to support environmentally sustainable schools. The U.S. Green Building Council, the Washington, D.C.-based group that promulgates the Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) rating tool, is spearheading the "50 for 50" effort to lower school energy and maintenance costs and bolster student learning and health. Read More...
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Posted: Sept. 8, 2008
ROCKVILLE, Md. – Montgomery County Public Schools announced it will install solar photovoltaic systems on the roofs of several schools. This initiative will make MCPS the first school system in the state of Maryland and the Washington, D.C., metropolitan area to launch a large-scale solar photovoltaic program. Each solar PV system within the program will be capable of producing between 100 and 400 kilowatts of electric power. Read More...
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Posted: Aug. 1, 2008
WASHINGTON — Waterless urinals. Geothermal cooling systems. Photovoltaic solar panels. The space shuttle? Try your child's school. Read More...
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Posted: July 1, 2008
LEED for Schools was one year old in April, and according to U.S. Green Building Council Education Sector Manager Rachel Gutter, today between one and two schools register for LEED certification every day. Underlying this groundswell is a combination of enormous stakeholder advocacy for the program, a growing concern about rising energy bills at the school district level, and development of the tools and information that allow for economical and standardized green school construction. Read more...
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Posted: June 30, 2008
A small middle school with plants sprouting on its roof and a research complex at Harvard University with sunlight-harvesting glass-bubble lounges would seem to have little in common. Yet both show how quickly the green revolution in building design is moving, unleashing architectural inventiveness not seen in 100 years. Read more...
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Posted: June 27, 2008
Last month, to far (FAR) less attention than it merited, the House of Representatives passed the 21st Century Green High-Performing Public School Facilities Act with $20 billion for greening public schools across the nation. Read more...
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Posted: June 17, 2008
The schools of Beaufort County, S.C.'s, future could operate with dramatically lower utility costs and offer a healthier, more comfortable environment for students and faculty that can improve learning. Read more...
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Posted: April 29, 2008
One school a day. That’s the rate America’s schools are registering for the U.S. Green Building Council’s (USGBC) LEED certification program for green schools, signaling their intent to build and operate schools that are more energy and water efficient, which will save taxpayers money. Green schools also have significantly improved indoor air quality, and that results in healthier kids. Read more...