Is it time for Seattle to embrace graffiti?
The following post is by DJC staff:
There are ways to add some fun to city streets. What if you could play a pickup game of ping-pong or chess on the way home from work?
CEOs for Cities’ blog has a post by Tara Sturm called “Ten Creative Ideas for Energizing Our Streets” that offers lots of ideas and examples: Colored crosswalks, whimsical bus stops, gardens in unexpected places and even graffiti-style art in public places. Here’s a three-story example taken on a recent stroll along the High Line in New York.
Check out Sturm’s post and add your ideas for things Seattle can do to make our streets more lively, energized and entertaining.
LEED faces major changes…. But LEED, I thought I knew you!!!
Hold onto your hats folks, the LEED you know and love (or heck, hate) is growing up.
If you've worked with LEED before (like the people that worked on the LEED gold Hearst Tower in Manhattan at right), you know what it looks like. You get equally weighed points for energy efficient design, renewable energy use, construction waste management and low emitting materials to name a few areas, though there are certain points you have to get. A project gets to be LEED platinum by getting between 52 and 69 points for new construction, and only 26 to 32 points for LEED certified.
Well, on Tuesday, the USGBC announced it opened its public comment period on LEED 2009, part of LEED 3.0.... and it basically looks nothing like what you know LEED to be.
Green buildings galore Part 2: AIA picks the greenest projects in the country
Yesterday, the American Institute of Architects Committee on the Environment announced its high profile list of the top ten greenest projects in the country. One of them is from Seattle.
For any of you that don't know this competition, this is a very..... big..... deal. For those of you that do know it, do you think it should be as big a deal as it is? And are these really the greenest projects in the country? What do you think?
The winning Seattle entry was the South Lake Union Discovery Center by Miller/Hull (at left). I'd tell you more about it, but there's been lots written on this unique modular building that is designed to break about in four pieces, move to another location and be reconfigured. If you want to learn more about it, read a story I wrote on it last summer here.
It's also worth noting that this project did not win the regional version of this
award.... judges at the AIA Seattle COTE mentioned it and praised its ability to move, but said its lack of "living environment" led the panel to pick another project as a regional winner. To see the projects they chose, click here. Which judging team do you think made the right decision?
Like I said, this award is a big deal. The only other project to win the award this year on the West Coast was the Nueva School, Hillside Learning complex outside San Francisco (at left). Other winners this year were in New York, Massachusetts, Connecticut, Wisconsin, Louisiana, Pennsylvania, and Arizona.
The Queens Botanical Visitor & Administration Building in Flushing, New York is pictured above right. Below left is the Cesar Chavez Library in Laveen, Ariz. Below right is the Pocono Environmental Education Center in Dingman's Ferry, Penn.
I could talk about these projects for hours, but really, I just want to show you the pictures. The AIA's Web site is a comprehensive source of information. For an overview, go here. To learn more about a specific project, go to the link at left and click on any underlined project's name. For an overview, see my story here . For more pictures, check out the slideshow that goes with my story, currently on the Web site at www.djc.com.
By the way, it's clear from these pictures that the accessory of the year was the slanted roof, eh? What do you think the accessory of next year is going to be? And check below for my first posting on green buildings galore!



