Showing posts with label carbon footprint. Show all posts
Showing posts with label carbon footprint. Show all posts

12/17/08

Greenwall Proposal "B"

Greenwall Proposal "B"
2. Active Living Walls
by Ashley, Veronica, Amy and David

Our research into the HVAC system of the Sharp Centre showed us how fresh air is brought indoors and that we do not need to open windows (or want them open because air from a window would throw off the HVAC's feedback sensors that monitor room temperature and humidity). So, if the IAQ is excellent, what is the problem?

Heating and Cooling outdoor air burns fossil fuels

In the winter, cold fresh air must be heated before it can go into the building, and in the summer it must be cooled. This levelling of the outdoor air temperature to comfortable room temperature is carbon-intensive as well as costly, especially when one considers that the indoor air is refreshed several times per hour. To do this job the building's heating bill and eco-footprint must be enormous.

Thus! Our problem changed from a concern about IAQ to one of reducing the building's eco-footprint.


Active Living Walls: Let's make our own fresh air!
Greenwalls, or more precisely, "Active Living Walls" as patented by Nedlaw, the company that designed the Koffler Institute wall that I saw (above), are alternative sources of fresh air that replace outdoor air ventilation, and because the air stays indoors the HVAC doesn't need to heat or cool it as much, if at all. A Living Wall is a microcosm of the ecology of the world outside that replicates indoors what happens outdoors, namely those processes that generate the fresh air we breathe. How it works is that the air inside a building is pulled through the living wall where microbes (bacteria) thrive in a continuously moving film of water and as air meets water the microbes breakdown any contaminants like VOC's in the air before the HVAC recirculates the fresh air back into the (closed) loop. So, there you have it, people, fresh air all year long without heating or cooling it to the extent that we do now.



Ideal Location

Where is the most effective location for a living wall at OCAD? Right in your face as you walk through the doors! When you look up, there are walls that go up forever right up to the roof. Putting living walls left, right and centre would not get in anybody's way; and if that weren't enough, these walls face windows that bombard them with natural light all day long.


To prove my point, look at how well this little guy is doing!


Cost
Nedlaw told me that the Koffler wall cost about $35K to install. My own quick and rough calculation is that a wall the size of our proposal would be...let us say, several times more than that!
Though I imagine it would pay for itself very quickly, the daunting startup cost is why we finally went with Proposal "A", The Green Screen. However...

Opportunity knocks: The Bandwagon is coming!


Toronto to Host 2009 International Green Roof Congress
1000's of people will attend:
Architects
Landscape architects
Engineers
Roofing Professionals
Policy Makers
NGOs
Academics
Manufacturers
Contractors

And when one looks at who is on the advisory committee, who can doubt that green infrastructure is becoming mainstream:
  • Brian Denney, CAO, Toronto Regional Conservation Authority (TRCA)
  • Marian Fraser, President, Fraser & Company
  • Eva Ligeti, Executive Director, Clean Air Partnership
  • Peter Love, Chief Conservation Officer, Ontario Power Authority
  • Gord Miller, Environmental Commissioner of Ontario
  • Ken Ogilvie, Executive Director Emeritus, Pollution Probe
  • David O'Brien, President & CEO, Toronto Hydro
  • Scott Pegg, Environmental Policy Group, Ontario Ministry of Energy & Infrastructure
  • Anastasios (Tas) Venetsanopoulos, VP Research & Innovation, Ryerson University Toronto
  • Scott Wylie, President, Wytech Building Envelope Solutions / Chair, GRHC Ontario Chapter
Conclusion
It's a no brainer that our Greenwall Proposal "B" while expensive is not far fetched but is in fact very much in touch with the zeitgeist, and as such, if we proposed this next year funding would be thrown at our living wall from all directions. Then OCAD would be renowned not only for the hip Sharp Centre but also for our Living (and breathing) Wall.


note:
I wasn't going to blog this since our group went with Proposal "A", but doing the presentation this morning put a spur into me blogspot.

10/5/08

My ecological footprint is 3.1 planets. I’m surprised it’s this much because I walk everywhere. To change this I should reduce my electricity usage. But unfortunately I don’t know how much it is because it isn’t included in rent.

9/23/08

Alfred's Ecological Footprint

Its kind of interesting to see where my lifestyle takes the most in which productive area. I guess I do use a lot of Energy, creating 54.6 tons of carbon dioxide and also taking up 40.3 acres of land on earth's productive area. 

Mobility takes up more than half of my footprint, service and food comes second. I guess travelling around places is one of my main activities.

Andrey's footprint
















Looks like i need 3.5 Earths to support my lifestyle...wow!

I guess i need to cut down on my electricity usage, eat less chicken and other meats and try to buy more local products.

carbon maker : sarah bolton


For me, it would take about 3.1 earths to sustain my way of living. I don't really know how much energy I use but apparently it's still a lot. I guess I'll have to cut the lights as much as possible!

9/22/08

My Footprint - Caitlin Russell



My ecological footprint came to 3.3 planet earth's, and 15.8 tons of carbon dioxide.  I also tried out the Zero Footprint calculator, which had more detailed questions, and that came to 12.9 tons of CO2, so both results are fairly close.
To reduce my footprint, I can buy more goods using recycled materials, and less packaging. 

9/21/08

Mariz's Footprint

I personally cannot believe that for me to live with whatever I live with now, that I would need 3.7 planet earths for resources. I thought that maybe I would do better since I recycle 99% at least of everything that I buy that is recycle-able. But I guess in the end of the day, recycling can only do so much.
To improve my results in the future, I think that I should probably be more conscious of the products I buy and consider where it's from and especially consider its packaging and what it's made out of. Maybe I should also eat way more vegetables or something to reduce the amount of animal products that I buy (meat&dairy).

9/19/08

My Footprint

This is my Footprint. To improve it I think I should buy more local foods, recycle more, and really need to cut down on buying electronic gadgets.

9/18/08

carbon footprint

This is my Eco foot print. Wish I did not have to consume 3 worlds...would rather save one for our whales. I CAN lower my eco footprint by eating more locally grown food.