Showing posts with label Environmentalism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Environmentalism. Show all posts

Saturday, April 24, 2010

Fountain Fling Continues in the Rain

On Saturday afternoon, hundreds of students flocked to the Mount Vernon campus for the annual Fountain Fling event, despite cloudy skies and rain.

The event was moved to the Lloyd gym due to the weather, but was still a great success with student performances, giveaways and a concert by the well-known alternative rock band State Radio. Students were crowd surfing and enjoying the band that recently had three sold-out concerts at the 9:30 club and opened for Dave Matthews Band in 2008.

GW was the last of seven stops on the Save My Oceans tour, which advocates against global warming, plastic pollution and overfishing. The “bag monster” also made an appearance at the event. The Bag Monster ‘attacks’ on college campuses to educate about the importance of reusable bags and the amount of unnecessary waste created from single-use plastic bags. The costume is made up of 500 single-use plastic bags and represents the amount an average person uses in one year in the United States.

The Surfrider Foundation was also in attendance to spread awareness about the protection and enhancement of the world’s oceans. Brita water filters and reusable water bottles were given out along with free food and Fountain Fling t-shirts.


“I am very impressed with the turn-out, especially considering the rain and moving of locations,” said Alyssa Abraham, who lives on the Vern and helped plan the event with Program Board. “It shows that GW students are willing to make the trip to the Vern if there is a good reason to.”


For more information on the Save My Oceans film, book and concert tour, go to www.savemyoceans.com

Saturday, October 10, 2009

Green Housing Comes to Mall for Solar Decathlon

The National Mall is considerably greener this month, but don't thank the park service.

Guests read facts about each house while waiting to tour the interiors.The US Department of Energy is hosting its 4th "Solar Decathlon," a competition in which college teams from around the country compete to design and construct the most attractive, effective, and energy-efficient house. Twenty teams from places as far away as Spain have built houses on the National Mall between the Capitol and the Washington Monument.
The goals of the competition are wide-ranging, but the two primary purposes are to educate the student participants about the benefits of green energy, and to raise awareness among the general public about renewable energy and energy efficiency.

Houses were designed and constructed at their respective universities, taken apart, and shipped to Washington for the competiton, where seven days were given to each team to reconstruct their entry on the  National Mall.

WRGW had the opportunity to tour one of the most interesting entrants to the competition, a house constructed by the University of Arizona named the SEED [pod].

The SEED [pod] focuses heavily on the use of natural and passive processes accomplish things that typically require electricity in a normal home.  For example, the house features what was called a "Water Wall" to passively heat and cool the interior space.  An entire wall of the house consists of what is effectively a plastic water tank filled with water, which absorbs heat through sunlight during the day and releases it during the night.  The Water Wall may also be used to cool the house by reversing the process above.

Green Houses lined the National Mall for the fourth annual Solar Decathlon.The idea for the Water Wall was originally a student thesis.  Team members highlighted the feature as an example of how the project was a vehicle for student research.

While the project took advantage of the efficiencies gained through passive processes, including large doors to allow for greater airflow and a design that allowed for circulation of air inside the house, innovations in solar-generated electricity were also present.  The solar panels utilized by the team are bifacial, meaning that they absorb sunlight on both sides.  To aid in solar collection, the roof of the SEED [pod] is painted white, reflecting light back through the solar panels and taking full advantage of their potential.

Due to the remote nature of the competition and the transportation challenges involved, modularity was a theme among all houses, especially the SEED [pod].  In fact, the entry derives much of its name from the modular nature of its house: SEED is a reference to the owner's ability to expand the house as his or her life progresses.  The house is constructed of "modules" that typically represent a single function, such as a kitchen, bathroom, office, or bedroom.  The house is designed in a way that allows for easy addition of these modules, so that a family expecting its first child could simply purchase an additional bedroom instead of an entirely new house.  This prefabrication allows the team to both cut costs and waste when considering the possibility of widespread adoption of their project.

To cut costs even more, the structural elements of the project are designed to be easily manufactured by any local steel company, further cutting transportation costs.  Most structural pieces are created from folded flat sheet steel, and specific instructions on their cutting and folding have already been created by the team.  Ideally, the team wishes for the consumer to be able to purchase a house plan and have a local facility complete the fabrication.

The houses are open to the public October 9th-13th and October 15th-18th.  For more information, including judging scores and links to teams' websites, visit www.solardecathlon.org.