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LEED Platinum at UCSB
by ArchitectureWeek
It is fitting that one of the first
buildings to be certified by the U.S. Green Building Council for
achieving the "platinum" LEED
status is a school dedicated to researching environmental issues,
training research scientists and professionals, and identifying and
solving environmental problems.
The Donald Bren School of Environmental
Science and Management at the University of California, Santa
Barbara was designed by the Los Angeles office of Zimmer
Gunsul Frasca Partnership (ZGF). The building achieved its
platinum status by achieving very low energy consumption and through
low-impact construction practices.
The four-story, 85,000-square-foot
(8000-square-meter) campus building is shaped to maximize natural
ventilation. A narrow band of offices has windows that open to ocean
breezes, and the courtyard that the offices encircle further
enhances airflow into the laboratory spaces downwind. The
rectangular lab wing gives a more conventional face to the
orthogonal grid of the rest of the campus.
The building provides space for applied
and quantitative ecology, earth systems sciences, environmental
engineering, environmental microbiology and toxicology, and
environmental policy and resource management. It houses faculty and
administrative offices, research laboratories, conference
facilities, teaching laboratories, and support facilities. >>>
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The Donald Bren School of Environmental Science and
Management, designed by Zimmer Gunsul Frasca Partnership,
overlooks the Pacific Ocean at the University of California,
Santa Barbara. Photo: Timothy Hursley
The interior courtyard, with interactive spaces at
lower and upper levels, facilitates daylighting and natural
ventilation. Photo: Timothy Hursley
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images to view full-size pictures.
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