Sustainable Preservation takes a nuanced look at the hundreds of choices that adaptive reuse requires architects to make from ingenious ways to redeploy existing structural elements to time-honored techniques for natural ventilation to creation of wetlands that restore a site's natural biological functions. In addition, Sustainable Preservation presents 50 case studies of projects schools, houses, offices, stores, museums, and government buildings that set new standards for holistic approaches to adaptive reuse and sustainability. The author covers design issues, from building location to lighting systems, renewable power options, stormwater handling, and building envelope protection and integrity. The book also reviews operational issues, including materials choices for low lifetime maintenance, green housekeeping, and indoor air quality.
Sustainable Preservation - Greening Existing Buildinngs
Description
Table of Contents
FOREWORD ( Richard Moe). ACKNOWLEDGMENTS. PART 1: OVERVIEW. CHAPTER 1: BUILDINGS AND ENVIRONMENTAL STEWARDSHIP UNDERSTANDING THE ISSUES. 1.1 Climate Change and Buildings the Imperative. 1.2 Historically Green What Makes Existing Buildings Green. 1.3 Terminology of Evolving Green Design. 1.4 Rethinking Assumptions Holistic Design. 1.5 There Is No Finish Creating a Culture of Reuse, Repair, and Renewal. CASE STUDIES. People's Food Co-op, Portland, OR. Harris Center for Conservation Education, Hancock, NH. Trinity Church in the City of Boston, Boston, MA. U. S. Naval Academy Historic Academic Group, Annapolis, MD. Forbes Park, Chelsea, MA. CHAPTER 2: BUILDINGS AND SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT UNDERSTANDING THE GOALS. 2.1 Sustainable Development versus Sustainable Design. 2.2 The Triple Bottom Line People, Planet, and Profit. 2.3 The Triple Bottom Line and Historic Preservation. 2.4 Regional/Community Connectivity. 2.5 Interwoven History of Sustainability and Historic Preservation. CASE STUDIES. CCI Center, Pittsburgh, PA. Center for Neighborhood Technology, Chicago, IL. Philadelphia Forensic Science Center, Philadelphia, PA. Brewers Hill (Natty Boh Building), Baltimore, MD. Denver Dry Building, Denver, CO. CHAPTER 3: TOOLS, GUIDELINES, AND PROCESS BALANCING THE GOALS. 3.1 Balancing Objective and Subjective Goals Integrated Design. 3.2 Green Tools and Metrics Urban and Campus. 3.3 Green Tools and Metrics Building and Site. 3.4 Historic Property Designation and Treatment Guidelines. 3.5 Balancing Systems and Guidelines Whole Building Design. CASE STUDIES. Whitaker Street Building, Savannah, GA. Alliance Center for Sustainable Colorado, Denver, CO. Thoreau Center for Sustainability, San Francisco, CA. Gerding Theater (Portland Center Stage), Portland, OR. Howard M. Metzenbaum U. S. Courthouse, Cleveland, OH. PART II: TARGETED RESOURCE CONSERVATION. CHAPTER 4: WATER AND SITE. 4.1 Water The Most Precious Commodity. 4.2 Watersheds, Stormwater, and Site Design. 4.3 Water and Energy Systems. 4,4 Water and Mechanical Systems. 4.5 Water and Sewage Systems. 4.6 Closing the Circle Reuse, Management, Education, Delight. CASE STUDIES. The Welcome and Admission Center at Roger H. Perry Hall, Champlain College, Burlington, VT. Chicago Center for Green Technology, Chicago, IL. Blackstone Station Offi ce Renovation, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA. Immaculate Heart of Mary Motherhouse, Monroe, MI. Lazarus Building, Columbus, OH. CHAPTER 5: ENERGY NOT THE ONLY, ISSUE BUT ... 5.1 Energy Overview. 5.2 Less Is More Avoided Impacts. 5.3 Reducing and Shifting Electrical Loads. 5.4 The Building Enclosure. 5.5 Avoiding Silos. CASE STUDIES. Cambridge City Hall Annex, Cambridge, MA. S.T. Dana Building, U. of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI. Lion House, Bronx Zoo, Bronx, NY. Scowcroft Building, Ogden, UT. John W. McCormack Federal Building, Boston, MA. CHAPTER 6: INDOOR HEALTH LIGHT, AIR, AND HEALTH. 6.1 Indoor Air Pollution. 6.2 Air Quality and Ventilation. 6.3 Light and Connections to Nature. 6.4 Healthy Spaces and Productivity. 6.5 Renewal and Delight. CASE STUDIES. AIA Honolulu, Honolulu, HI. Boulder Associates Office, Boulder, CO. NRDC Southern California Office (Robert Redford Building), CA. Alberici Corporate Headquarters, Overland, MO. Montgomery Park Business Center, Baltimore, MD. CHAPTER 7: MATERIALS AND RESOURCES REDUCE, REPAIR, REUSE, RECYCLE. 7.1 Consumption and Waste A Throwaway Culture. 7.2 Diverting Waste Reuse, Recycle, Downcycle. 7.3 Identifying Better Products. 7.4 Resource Optimization Extending Service Life. 7.5 Changing Priorities Ahead Respecting both Past and Future. CASE STUDIES. StopWaste, Oakland, CA. The Barn at Fallingwater, Mill Run, PA. Pittsburgh Glass Center, Pittsburgh, PA. North Dakota State University School of Visual Arts & Architecture, Fargo, ND. Children's Museum of Pittsburgh Expansion, Pittsburgh, PA. PART III: OF SPECIAL NOTE. CHAPTER 8: BEST PRACTICES OPERATIONS, MAINTENANCE, AND CHANGE. 8.1 Opportunities Essential and Immediate. 8.2 Implementation Tools. 8.3 Housekeeping Continual Improvement. 8.4 O & M the User Impact. 8.5 Best Practice Facilitating Change. CASE STUDIES. St. Stephen's Episcopal K-8 School, Harrisburg, PA. Candler Library Renovation, Emory University, Atlanta, GA. Jean Vollum Natural Capital Center, Portland, OR. Eastern Village Cohousing Condominiums, Silver Spring, MD. Felician Sisters Convent and School, Coraopolis, PA. CHAPTER 9: HOUSES. 9.1 Houses The Impact of Our Choices. 9.2 Energy Conservation, Envelope, and Alternative Energy. 9.3 Holistic Water Conservation. 9.4 Materials Reduce, Reuse, Recycle, Repair, and Renew. 9.5 Changing Behavior and Options Living Sustainably. CASE STUDIES. Hanvey House, North Vancouver, BC. Solar Umbrella House, Venice, CA. Capitol Hill House, Seattle, WA. Adeline Street Urban Salvage Project, Berkeley, CA. Chicago Bungalows, Chicago, IL. CHAPTER 10: THE RECENT PAST. 10.1 The Recent Past Modern Architecture, Boomer Buildings. 10.2 Preservation Challenges. 10.3 Environmental Dilemmas. 10.4 Strategies for Renewal. 10.5 Lessons Learned. CASE STUDIES. Karges-Faulconbridge Offi ce Building, Roseville, MN. Crown Hall, Chicago, IL. North Boulder Recreation Center, Boulder, CO. California College of the Arts, San Francisco, CA. Vancouver Island Technology Park, Victoria, BC. INDEX.
Author Description
JEAN CARROON, FAIA, LEED AP, leads Goody Clancy's highly regarded preservation practice, based in Boston. She has earned national recognition for her expertise in applying sustainable-design technology to historic buildings, including more than a dozen National Historic Landmarks. She has directed the adaptive reuse and preservation of signature buildings in a broad range of sectors, including educational, civic, and cultural projects for clients such as Harvard University and the National Park Service. Carroon has been overseeing renovation of more than fifty historic structures on the St. Elizabeth's West Campus in Washington, D.C., which will become the home of the Department of Homeland Security. A member of the National Trust for Historic Preservation Sustainability Coalition and the Advisory Group of the AIA Historic Resources Committee, she helped draft the Pocantico Proclamation on Sustainability and Historic Preservation.