>
Tag Archives: sustainability

Gita Nanden says green design isn’t just for eco snobs

20 Nov

By Rachel Walker | Grist

Gita Nanden Gita NandenIt’s one thing to pour money into your shmancy new gazillion-dollar, net-zero eco bungalow. It’s quite another to bring that design — and the underlying philosophy that “green is good” — to the multitudes of urban dwellers who are more familiar with subway schedules than they are with LEED certification or the Home Energy Rating System.

That’s where Gita Nanden comes in. The Brooklyn-based architect and co-founder of Thread Collective wants to take green building beyond the pages of Dwell magazine and into the realm of housing projects and urban farms.

“We don’t want to be the progenitors of gentrification,” says Nanden, whose firm recently completed construction on its new green office building, located in Brooklyn’s transitioning Bushwick neighborhood. Rather, she and her partners want to design eco-friendly buildings and spaces that are as likely to house people on welfare as they are to house upper middle class professionals.

Before we go any further, though, a disclaimer: “We still do high-end design at our firm, and we love that,” says Nanden.

Noted. Also worth noting is Thread Collective’s commitment to working with nonprofits and government agencies to incorporate sustainable design into public places like parks and community centers — all as a way of drawing people into the process of creating a better city. The natural entry point for that goal, says Nanden, is through urban agriculture.

“People love food,” she says. “Whether it’s social networking at a community garden or eating at a farm-to-table dinner, urban farms are a way for people to come together. So the architecture component needs to support that. Public spaces need to help filter urban agriculture into the urban fabric, so the food component isn’t relegated to people’s back yards.”

Added Value
By way of example, Nanden and her partners have designed a 7,000-square-foot Red Hook Center on Sustainability and Culture, a project at Added Value, a 3.5-acre community farm in the Red Hook neighborhood. The center, which will begin to rise next spring, will be blatantly green, with interpretive signs explaining all the eco bells and whistles, which will be exposed for all to see. For instance, the solar systems will not be placed on the roof. Rather, they’ll double as shade canopies. The roof will be built out of shipping palettes.

Added Value farm has long been a community draw in Red Hook, Brooklyn’s poorest neighborhood, where the average annual income is about $20,000. Many of the residents in the nearby housing project avail themselves of the farm’s established job training program — and help grow some of their own food. “The farm is a hub, and it embodies sustainable principles like healthy food and nutrition,” she says. The new center will “act like a self-guided museum; people will learn more about urban agriculture, storm water harvesting, and bio remediation” — cleaning up the dirt and water with the help of microorganisms.

Nanden hopes that the new Center will be a catalyst for similar sustainable building projects throughout New York’s five boroughs. (She and her partners contributed to the research and writing of the recently released Five Boroughs Farm report, a “road map” for New York City’s urban farms.

But in the meantime, the community has more pressing concerns. Hurricane Sandy hit Red Hook hard, pummeling homes and businesses and cutting power to residents for weeks. The deluge also submerged Added Value farm under three feet of water.

Soil tests indicate there isn’t long-term damage to the growing grounds at Added Value as a result of the hurricane, she says. Still, the farm is in need of serious clean up and operators are soliciting donations and asking for volunteers to help with the work. With a little luck — and a lot of elbow grease — they’ll be ready to put seeds in the ground come spring, when crews plan to break ground on the new community center.

Rachel Walker writes about the environment, snow, skiing, and other things from Boulder, Colo.

DE-troit!

23 Sep

It a’int over ’till it’s over! Folks who live in Detroit have decided to take their city back. Too right!
Thanks to Daily Grist for the story.

Wars will be fought over water

9 Aug

‘And During the Wet Years They Lost All Memory of the Dry Years’: Time For a New Water Ethic

We’ve acted as though there was no drought until it was too late and we failed to take steps to reduce our water use by serious efforts to improve efficiency and cut waste.


from: Pacific Institute / By Peter Gleick

In 1952 John Steinbeck wrote East of Eden, a monumental book about the lives of a community, families, and individuals living in the Salinas Valley of California from the late 1800s through the Great War. The scope of the book is vast, taking on the themes of love and hate, good and evil, the sweep of human emotions, frailties, and strengths, all in the context of a California that no longer exists. And while the book isn’t about water, themes of water flow through it as a metaphor for the cycles of life, drought and flood, and in images of California alternatively parched and quenched. I’ve just had the enormous pleasure of reading it, and near the very beginning, amidst the grand truths woven through the book is the following prose, as true today as a century ago:

    “And it never failed that during the dry years the people forgot about the rich years, and during the wet years they lost all memory of the dry years. It was always that way.”

Read the article here.

A shoebox apartment with super-sized versatility

21 May

[This caught my eye because I like to fit as much as I can into small spaces. I'm currently living in a room slightly larger than this space, but along the same principle.]

Gary Chang takes compact living to the extreme with his 330-square foot Hong Kong apartment that squeezes in over 24 different room configurations.

If you follow green building and architecture, you’re probably aware that size does indeed matter.

Meet Gary Chang, a Hong Kong architect who transformed his pint-sized living space — a cramped 330-square foot apartment typical for densely populated Hong Kong — into a super-efficient, 24-room bachelor pad with the help of an ingenious system of sliding walls, panels, and gizmos.

Chang’s apartment — dubbed “The Domestic Transformer — truly has to be seen to be believed so check out the below video from World’s Greenest Homes. The New York Times also profiled Chang and his amazing mini-mansion back in January. Would you able to live in this kind of set-up? Or are actual rooms irreplaceable?