Living green
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Young Chang
A building can be environmentally safe and still lovely, arts leaders
say.
In fact, a new exhibit at the Orange County Museum of Art makes the
point that environmental responsibility in architecture is essential not
only to how a structure saves energy, but to its aesthetic exterior.
“In many ways, this is a forward-thinking exhibition,” said museum
curator Sarah Vure. “It’s considering how we use our resources today and
how we adjust for the future.”
Called “Ten Shades of Green,” the exhibit on sustainable architecture
is filled with architect’s tables supporting different photographs and
drawing plans of environmentally-wise buildings around the world.
Cool little iMac stations let visitors learn more about each stop
online.
Nine of the featured works are business buildings in Europe and
Australia. Four are American houses. The exhibit, organized by The
Architectural League of New York and supported by Orange County’s Thomas
Blurock Architects, represents 10 themes when it comes to thinking
environmentally, or thinking “green.”
More than half of the energy in the world is used for constructing and
maintaining buildings, said museum spokesperson Brian Langston. But for
at least the last 20 years, architects and builders have made progress in
making buildings more energy efficient, more livable for tenants and,
consequently, more conductive to the sprouting of communities.
“And that’s exactly what the show is about,” Langston sad. “It’s not
just only about putting solar collectors on the roof. There are all these
other dimensions to greenness.”
Principals that are stressed in the “Ten Shades” include how buildings
need to be built from recycled or recyclable materials.
Wood is preferred over glass or steel, for example, because it
requires less energy to create with from a natural source, Vure said.
Buildings need to be as efficient as possible in using external
energy.
They should be nonpolluting
“It offers the challenge to American architects to consider these
environmental issues,” Vure said. “These concerns really are about
thinking about the future.”
Models of the Gotz Headquarters in Wurzburg, Germany show its glass
box-in-a-box style that lets air flow through its outer cavity and
atrium, bringing in a maximum amount of natural light and saving energy.
The glass design makes it appear to be floating.
The Mont-Cenis Training Center, a government training institution in
Herne-Sodingen, Germany, has a wooden inside structure surrounded by a
glass shell.
The Minnaert Building in Utrecht, The Netherlands features rooflights
that let rainwater run into a tank in the middle of the structure. That
water is then circulated around the building to counteract the heat
radiated from rooms of computers.
Other architectural models include the University of Nottingham
Jubilee Campus in Nottingham, England; the Slateford Green in Edinburgh,
Scotland; Hall 26 in Hanover, Germany; the Beyeler Foundation Museum in
Riehen, Switzerland; Cotton Tree Pilot Housing in Sunshine Coast,
Australia; the Commerzbank Headquarters in Frankfurt, Germany and four
houses from California, Arizona, Texas and Nova Scotia.
When asked how architecture fits into the program and mission of the
museum, Vure said the discipline is an art form that combines aesthetics,
engineering and design.
Langston added that the museum always strives for “creative
commentary” with its visitors.
“It’s not just paintings and sculptures,” he said. “I think, in
general, we are interested in showing architecturally oriented
exhibitions and this one struck us as a particularly relevant show...
especially right now.”
FYI
* What: “Ten Shades of Green”
* When: Through June 30. Museum hours are 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday
through Sunday.
* Where: Orange County Museum of Art, 850 San Clemente Drive, Newport
Beach
* Cost: $5 for adults, $4 for seniors and students, and free for
members and children younger than 16
* Call: (949) 759-1122.
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