|
In November 2005, the Children's Discovery Museum achieved a Silver
rating from the U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC). Through the
USGBC’s rating system known as LEED (Leadership in Energy and
Environmental Design) Green Building Rating System, the USGBC
promotes buildings that are environmentally responsible, profitable
and healthy places to live and work.
It is the first newly constructed building outside of the
Chicagoland area and the first children’s museum in the country to
be rated LEED Silver or higher.
So what does this Silver rating mean? It means the Museum was
built with the health of its visitors and employees in mind. By
gaining a Silver rating, the Museum met or exceeded the following
requirements:
- The use of environmentally friendly paint, adhesives, and
cleaning solutions.
- Green power and recycled material usage.
- During construction, the closure of outside ducts to contain
the spread of construction by-products.
For more information about LEED, its rating system or other
projects, visit www.usgbc.org.
The following is an article printed in The Pantagraph
on November 29, 2005. Byline: By Mary Ann Ford.
MUSEUM DEEMED LEEDER IN ENERGY
NORMAL -- The Children's Discovery Museum has done something
others are only hoping to achieve.
It's the first children's museum in the nation to earn a silver
rating in Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design from the
U.S. Green Building Council.
“It's fantastic," said Normal Assistant City Manager Pamela
Reece. "We were just excited to be the first to implement LEED
standards downtown. And we were excited to be the first public
facility in the area (reaching LEED certification). But it's
fantastic we're the first children's museum.
"Not only does it set a standard for construction but as an
educational facility for youth. It shows we do care for the people
in it both the youth and the employees."
Ten other children's museums across the country are either
building toward certification or waiting for official word from the
U.S. Green Building Council, said Janet Rice Elman, executive
director of the Association of Children's Museums in Washington,
D.C.
"It's the trend," said Rice Elman. "The (children's museum) field
is growing so rapidly, it's a natural fit to see a certain number
looking at green building designs. It tells the community they care
deeply about the long-term health of the community."
Reece said the local museum achieved the status through such
things as recycling construction waste, using a roof that reflects
light, installing a high energy-efficient heating and air
conditioning system, and providing showers and locker rooms to
encourage employees to bicycle or use other alternatives to driving
to get to work.
The museum also gained points by using building materials with a
high content of recycled products and by getting materials within a
500-mile radius.
But the process was very time-consuming. Reese said general
contractors CORE Construction dedicated one worker just to
documenting the process for the certification. CORE had to provide
several recycling bins to separate materials and had to keep track
of the percent of items diverted from the landfill.
"This shows small- and medium-sized museums can also be a
leader," said Children's Discovery Museum manager Shari Buckellew.
Experts say environmentally friendly buildings pay for themselves
in the long run, Reece said, but there also are other benefits.
"Employees are healthier in a building when glue, paint and
primer meet air standards," she said.
"It's a commitment to the sustainability of children and family
as well as the community and the environment," said Rice Elman.
|