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Governor Recognizes Environmental
Achievements
Olympia -- Washington state Gov. Gary Locke has honored the
BetterBricks Daylighting Lab with the Governor's Award for
Pollution Prevention & Sustainable Practices.
The awards recognize businesses, agencies and organizations
that reach high environmental protection goals - conserving
vital resources such as energy and water and reducing or eliminating
hazardous waste - while making products and providing services.
The BetterBricks Daylighting Lab and six other winners were
recognized for preventing pollution and using business practices
that are "sustainable" - those that support the
vitality of the economy, the environment and the community.
The BetterBricks Daylighting Lab, which is managed by the
University of Washington's School of Architecture in Seattle,
promotes using natural light through windows or skylights
as the primary source of interior lighting. Research indicates
that daylighting not only saves energy, but also improves
workplace health and productivity.
The work of the Daylighting Lab helps reduce the energy needed
for lighting and cooling work, saving more than $1 million
in electricity costs each year in the Northwest.
Electric lighting accounts for 40 percent of the total electrical
energy consumed in commercial buildings. It also generates
heat and adds to the building's cooling load. A building that
fully uses daylighting strategies can reduce total energy
costs by as much as 30 percent.
The Daylighting Lab also advises clients on meeting the U.S.
Green Building Council's requirements for Leadership in Energy
and Environmental Design (LEED) certification. The Lab
is involved in more than 50 building projects that are LEED
registered or certified. The American Institute of Architects
recognized one of the lab's projects - the Pierce County Environmental
Services Building - as a Top Ten Green Project for 2004.
Huntwood Building New Facility
Liberty Lake -- The most exciting phase of the construction
on the new Huntwood manufacturing facility was placing the
concrete tilt-up walls for this super-structure, each weighing
75,000 lb. An immense 200-ton crane was required.
Huntwood Industries, headquartered in Spokane, is in the
process of building a 540,000-sq.-ft. manufacturing plant
in Liberty Lake. Huntwood's new facility is the largest building
currently under construction in the Inland Northwest.
Construction started six months ago by the Haskins Co. and
is to be completed in late spring 2005, with move-in scheduled
for mid-2005. The new facility will consolidate manufacturing,
warehousing, and administrative functions within a single
location. The company expects, over the next ten years, to
employ over 1,400 people at this location.
Huntwood Industries, the West's leading manufacturer of custom
kitchen, bath, entertainment, and home office cabinetry, has
experienced exceptional growth over the past decade. Huntwood
products are sold and distributed throughout the western US,
Alaska, Hawaii, and a few select cities in the Midwest. The
company operates factory showrooms/warehouses in Spokane,
Seattle, Portland, Boise, Sacramento, and Phoenix. Huntwood
promotes its products to the new-construction and remodeling
trades.
HDR-EES Commissioned for
Study on Lead
BELLEVUE -- The AWWA Research Foundation (AwwaRF), with support
from 21 participating utilities and other entities, has commissioned
an HDR/EES-led team to conduct a study of the effects that
various lead bearing plumbing components have on compliance
with the Lead and Copper Rule. The Lead and Copper Rule requires
utilities to optimize corrosion control and if appropriate,
treat source water, deliver public education and replace lead
service lines to reduce lead in drinking water.
The stated goal of the three-year research project is "To
research and quantify the contribution of lead service lines,
utility-owned inline devices, and customer-owned plumbing
fixtures to Lead and Copper Rule compliance issues. The final
report is scheduled to be made available for publication in
November 2007.
HDR (www.hdrinc.com)
is an architectural, engineering and consulting firm with
more than 3,600 employees.
BPA Supports Energy Projects
Seattle -- Vote for Change artists announced they will help
fund several new small-scale solar energy and wind power plants
in several of the states they toured through earlier this
month.
"During the tour, the artists talked about how we could
help support local organizations already doing good work in
their communities around issues we all care about." said
Stone Gossard of Pearl Jam. "We decided to focus on local
projects that highlight opportunities for alternative energy
technologies in an effort to demonstrate community-based solutions
to our nation's reliance on oil."
In order to identify the best local organizations focusing
on alternative energy projects, Vote For Change partnered
with the Portland, Oregon-based Bonneville Environmental Foundation.
They have identified the projects Vote For Change artists
will support in this endeavor, and will help communities see
these projects through to their completion.
Support for two of the projects in the states the Vote for
Change tour traveled through earlier this month has already
been confirmed. Several more will be identified over the next
month.
WISCONSIN
The agencies of Family Centers in Madison, Wisconsin work
to prevent child abuse by helping to strengthen families.
As part of a facility renovation and expansion project that
is currently underway, Family Centers will get a solar hot
water system and a solar electric power system with the help
of additional funding from Wisconsin's Focus on Energy renewable
energy program.
FLORIDA
Palm Beach Central High School in Wellington, Florida, will
have a solar powered disaster shelter system installed, with
additional support from the Florida Solar Energy Center through
Florida's SunSmart Schools Program. School faculty will integrate
the new solar power system into their teaching to show the
importance of renewable energy to address economic development
and reduced reliance on foreign oil.
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