A recent story about the milestone in the Harvard Gazette states that the university has plans for roughly 3 million more square feet of building space to earn LEED certification, encompassing approximately 40 structures.
Harvard’s 50th LEED-certified building project is located in the Northwest Building. In order to reduce lighting costs and electricity consumption, “the Faculty of Arts and Sciences Zhang/Center for Brain Science Lab optimizes daylight and views [of the outside] and uses occupancy sensors to control lighting. A new ventilation system maximizes energy efficiency, adjusting temperature, airflow, and ventilation based on occupancy.”
Here are some highlights from the university’s green building program:
- Mather/Dunster became the nation’s first LEED-CI kitchen in 2006. The kitchen now features a composting machine, high-efficiency dishwashers, self-adjusting Melink exhaust hoods to ventilate cooking smoke, and a dish return that uses recycled gray water from the kitchen’s food grinder.
- The renovation of the 46 Blackstone complex, a former industrial site, was the University’s first LEED Platinum-certified project and one of its most ambitious undertakings to date. The brownfield project includes several on-site strategies to minimize pollution runoff to the Charles River, including a bioswale system that naturally filters stormwater runoff from an adjacent parking lot.
- The renovation of HGSE’s Larsen Hall First Floor classroom made it the first LEED-CI Platinum certified classroom in the world. Efficient lamps and fixtures with pre-set lighting scenes have helped reduced electricity use by an estimated 45 percent.
- The 2001 renovation of 42,000 square feet of space in Landmark Center became Harvard’s first LEED-certified project. More than 75 percent of workspaces have access to daylight and views, and the site now has efficient lighting systems and renewable bamboo floors.
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