Archive for the ‘Design’ Category

The 2030 Challenge Stimulus Plan

Thursday, December 18th, 2008

architecture 2030

Because investing in energy efficiency in buildings is the most effective way to create jobs and revive the economy (see Justification), Architecture 2030 recommends an investment of $171.72 billion ($85.86 billion each year for two years) in a plan that integrates a housing mortgage buy-down and an accelerated-depreciation program for commercial buildings with energy efficiency in buildings, specifically with the widely adopted energy reduction plan called the 2030 Challenge1. This investment will create 3.75 million direct jobs in the Building Sector, as well as 4.34 million indirect and induced jobs and over 350,000 jobs from consumer spending.

Of special note, tying the mortgage buy-down and accelerated depreciation to achieving specific energy reductions immediately creates the opportunity for a $1.6 trillion renovation market that does not currently exist. The immediacy and magnitude of this opportunity can turn the tide for the construction industry, as well as the nation.

The plan, called the 2030 Challenge Stimulus Plan (‘Plan’), would save consumers $142.33 billion to $200.88 billion2 in energy costs and mortgage payments over a five-year period, significantly reducing the risk of mortgage failure while increasing disposable income. Because the 2030 Challenge calls for buildings to be renovated or designed to reduce their fossil-fuel, GHG-emitting energy consumption in a range from 30% below that required by the IECC 2006 and ASHRAE 90.1-2004 code standards to carbon neutral3, the Plan will also reduce CO2 emissions by 481.13 MMT and energy consumption by 6.17 QBtu over the same five-year period.

Read the whole report…

Metropolis Magazine Sponsors Design Contest

Tuesday, December 2nd, 2008

Call for Entries:

Win $10,000
FIX OUR ENERGY ADDICTION

Rising energy costs present new design problems.

Redesign the broken models of the 20th century. Challenge our patterns of living and working in a fuel-hungry world…come up with solutions that connect us, make us more efficient, more humane.

Ask yourself…

How would I bring work closer to home?

Can a product help eliminate long commutes?

What can I do to revitalize old ideas such as living above the store?

What kind of interiors or furnishings does a telecommuter really need?

Or follow your own dreams…what calls out for a major redesign?

Focus on one area that needs fixing—products, interiors, buildings and landscape, communication systems, or anything else you can imagine—and develop your idea fully.

Open to all designers in practice 10 years or less.

Here’s the announcement…

In uncertain times…

Wednesday, November 12th, 2008

In uncertain times, don’t try to predict the future. Systematically explore possible futures.
- Ross Dawson

The Green Roof

Friday, October 31st, 2008


Metropolis Magazine: Part 2: The Green Roof

The California Academy of Sciences balances a commitment to biodiversity with a demand for beauty.

By Belinda Lanks

Posted September 17, 2008

How does a landscape architect cultivate nature without corrupting it? The question goes back at least to the 18th century, when the novelist Samuel Richardson wrote that the ideal was for the artist ‘not to level hills, or to force and distort nature; but to help it, as he finds it, without letting art be seen in his works, where he can possibly avoid it.’ The undulating green roof that sits atop the new California Academy of Sciences building in San Francisco’s Golden Gate Park tries to strike a?similar balance. Like the museum it shelters, it is designed to respect the natural world even as it appropriates it, serving at once as a wildlife habitat and a first-rate work of art.

When the roof (along with the building) opens to?the public this month, it will be, at 2.5 acres, the?largest such ‘living’ structure in California. Conceived in 1999 by the architect Renzo Piano (who also designed the building)”


More on this…

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