Innovation Showboard Package 2019

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#1

Roux Center for the Environment | Bowdoin College


Bowdoin College’s first LEED Platinum certified building, the 30,000 square foot Roux Center combines teaching, research and scholarship at a new edge of the campus environment.

Engineering Intelligent Labs Hi/Lo Teaching Landscapes Purposeful Gathering Transparent Environment
A mix of ductless and ducted fume hoods reduces An experimental, research-based vegetated A prominent lecture stair encourages active Teaching, research and scholarship on display
the energy profile from that of a typical lab. The roof and stormwater swale/geology garden at circulation and gathering and collects an wide through strategic use of glazing inside and
energy use intensity is 44 kBTU/sf/year. A 27kW grade were both developed in collaboration audience around the study of the environment. outside the building. Straightforward materials
photovoltaic array offsets over 13% of annual with Bowdoin faculty and students. reveal building systems and construction.
electric costs.

• 27kW photovoltaic array

• FSC certified wood facade

green roof/terrace •

native plantings and bio-swale • • ductless fume hoods


• rainwater recovery system • central lecture stair

Project Team:
Principal in Charge Timothy D. Mansfield, AIA
Project Architect Chris Muskopf, AIA
Architect Justin Crane, AIA
Designer Sydnor Scholer

Client: Bowdoin College


MEP & Fire Protection Engineer: Arup
Structural Engineer: Becker Structural Engineers
Landscape Architect: Stephen Stimson Associates
Civil Engineer: Sebago Technics
Building Envelope: Simpson Gumpertz Heger
Code Consultant: Jensen Hughes
Sustainability: Thornton Tomasetti
Contractor: Peter Warren Construction Group
Specifications: Kalin Associates

Thermally-modified poplar claddings provides an authentic, sustainable, and true-to-the-story of the building, related to the woods of Maine Transparency enables a clearer engagement of teaching, research and scholarship
#2

BABSON COLLEGE
WEISSMAN FOUNDRY
Babson Park, MA
This 10,000-square foot building is Babson’s newest
and most innovative academic center, built to foster
transdisciplinary educational experiences for students
from Babson, Olin, and Wellesley Colleges. The
stunning building envelope required tight coordination
across multiple trades to execute. Windover
facilitated the intricate high-performance MEP/
HVAC infrastructure, including moveable fixtures, high
power loads, and complex ductwork connections, by
implementing 3D BIM coordination and prefabrication
of selected elements. Set within a wooded landscape,
the industrial-looking Foundry has abundant natural
light, wood canopies, a custom energy recovery
unit, and a “living roof” that supports the college’s
sustainability commitment. The project has achieved
34.5% energy savings, 39.4% energy cost savings, 26%
potable water use reduction, and is one of the first
LEED v4 projects to perform a Whole Building Life-
Cycle Assessment demonstrating a 10.2% reduction in
greenhouse gasses.

Owner
LEED Scorecard BABSON COLLEGE
LEED BD+C v4 for New Construction
and Major Renovations

Targeting Silver 53
Architect
WILLIAM RAWN ASSOCIATES
Integrative Process 1/1

Location and Transportation 2/16 Contractor


Sustainable Sites 4/10
WINDOVER CONSTRUCTION

Water Efficiency 4/11


Structural Engineer
Energy & Atmosphere 21/33 LEMESSURIER
Materials & Resources 8/16
Mechanical Engineer /
Innovation In Design 5/6
Sustainability Consultant
Regional Priority Credits 1/4 VANDERWEIL
#3

New Science Center


Amherst College I AIA COTE Top Ten Award

The Amherst College New Science Center is a high intensity laboratory with one of
the lowest energy footprints of its typology. The building employs several strategies
contributing to energy efficiency including a high performance envelope, abundant
natural light, low-energy HVAC chilled beams, fan-coil distribution systems, optimized
fume hood control strategies, demand control ventilation including laboratory spaces,
high performance heat recovery with indirect evaporative cooling, and freezer heat
recovery for domestic hot water. Indirect-direct evaporative cooling reduces the
heating and cooling needed for the ventilation system to reduce peak loads in the
laboratories. High performance triple-pane glazing, curtainwall and façade systems
implement thermal breaks. Opaque, natural ventilation panels were used in the faculty
offices to provide natural ventilation while maintaining thermal integrity of the triple-
pane windows. The Commons’ roof monitors integrate architectural and mechanical
elements that provide an overall comfort conditioning solution: chilled beams, radiant
slabs, acoustic baffles and a photovoltaic array to generate onsite power.

Solar Array
Smoke Exhaust
91 kBtu/SF
External Shading
Heat Recovery

Chilled Beams Demand Control Ventilation


76% REDUCTION IN ENERGY USE
compared to the 2030 baseline

Natural Ventilation
Automatic Interior Shades
73% OF FLOOR AREA WITH
direct views to the outdoors

Radiant Slab for

58%
Heating & Cooling
SITE AREA
supports vegetation
Roof Overhang and High-Performance
Canopy Shading Fan Coil & Low-Flow
Displacement Diffusers Fume Hoods

58%
Natural Ventilation
RAINWATER MANAGED
from a two year, 24 hour storm event

High-Efficiency
Lab Equipment

41% PREDICTED REDUCTION IN


INDOOR WATER USE
compared to the LEED baseline
LOW ENERGY PAVILIONS COMMONS HIGH ENERGY LABORATORIES

Design Architect: PAYETTE | Structural Engineer: LeMessurier Consultants | MEP Engineer: van Zelm Engineers | Civil Engineer: Nitsch Engineering | Landscape Architect: Michael Van Valkenburgh Associates | © Chuck Choi Photography; © Robert Benson Photography
#4

LUMEN AT BEACON PARK


1903 W. Grand River Ave., Detroit, MI

A new restaurant building and park is situated along Grand River Avenue leading into the center of downtown
Detroit. The urban revitalization project and new public space is being created to anchor the emerging
neighborhood, spur economic development and provide a quality urban environment for the community to be
active in the city’s resurging and vibrant downtown. Central to its modern geometry are strong cantilevered roof
forms gesturing towards the historic Detroit G.A.R. building and the park’s elliptical lawn, along with a grand stair
leading to a roof deck on axis with the historic Detroit Book Tower Building. Connections to the park landscape are
further enhanced through a green roof and folding glass walls that provide flexible programming for indoor/outdoor
experiences such as restaurant seating, markets, musical performance and community meeting spaces.

Recognitions DTE
client
2019 IIDA New England Design Awards Lumen Detroit
Best in Show restaurant owner
2018 AIA New England Design Awards
Touloukian Touloukian Inc.
Honor Award architect
2018 BSA Hospitality Design Award
2018 BSA Honor Award for Design livingLab
landscape architect
Excellence
2018 Design Core Detroit Studio NYL
structural engineer
Commerce Design Detroit Award, Finalist
2018 AIA Detroit Architectural Honor Peter Basso Associates Inc.
Awards - Building Award MEP & FP
2018 American Architecture Award The Tooles / Roncelli
Chicago Athenaeum prime contractor
2018 Metal Architecture Design
Resilient Building Group
Award - Judges Award LEED consultant
2017 Green Good Design Award
Saroki Architecture
The Chicago Athenaeum Furnishings, fixtures and select finishes

B module A
A module B

module C

C D module D

A module A

acoustical fabric
site context - urban nodes site context - response to historic landmarks

open air open air


dining and bar performance space

site plan with urban axes reflected ceiling axonometric

LEED Silver - 56 / 110 Regional Material Water Use Reduction Optimize Energy Performance Green Power Site Habitat Restoration
20/26 sustainable sites +20.0% regional materials used 32.8% fixtures are low-flow 18.4% energy saved above ASHRAE 90.1 35.0% energy consumed is from 35.2% site vegetation coverage
renewable sources
11/35 energy & atmosphere
Certified Wood Heat Island Effect
8/15 indoor quality finish wood used is Stormwater Quantity Control roof materials used have
Recycled Content 100% a Solar Reflectance Index
100.0% Forest Stewardship 36.5% stormwater run-off reduction
greater than 78
7/14 materials & resources Council (FSC) certified 20.0% recycled
materials
content

4/10 water efficiency


green roof
3/4 regional priority

3/6 innovation
mechanical

acoustic absorption passive ventilation


LED lights

cistern

sustainable building section

touloukian touloukian inc - architecture + urban design - boston, ma @ttinc_boston touloukian_touloukian w w w . t ta r c h . c o m


#5

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LightView at Northeastern University


744 Columbus Ave. Boston, MA 02120

Summary:
Designing sustainable living spaces is crucial to providing a healthy, comfortable, and socially responsible environment
for students to thrive in. LightView has been designed and built using construction industry best-practices for sustain­
ability and measured by the LEED for Homes Mid-Rise rating system. The project site is located on the southeastern
edge of the Northeastern University campus and is an ideal location for pedestrian and transit-oriented student hous­
ing. The building includes commercial space, student related community amenities and services at the ground floor,
and 207 modern student apartments (798 beds) housed in an assemblage of components: a low-rise portion of eight
stories on Columbus Avenue, a mid-rise portion of 16 stories on Coventry Street, and a high-rise portion of 20 stories
in the middle of the block on Burke Street. The mid-rise and high-rise are connected by a glazed narrow bridge, which
create transparency through these two component parts.

Site:
This is an infill site where building design approach required sensitivity to the existing historical
scale of Columbus Ave as a critical campus street. Inserting a high rise into this neighborhood
fabric required a unique approach, resulting in what appears to be three separate structures
that create layers of scale, respecting the edge of Columbus at a human scale, and allowing for
a section of the building to rise 20 floors. The site is surrounded by an outstanding amount of
community resources and transportation options to strengthen the student's connection with
the surrounding community. A key function of the design intent is when standing on north
campus looking at the Boston skyline, the vertical towers are elements that students can use to
navigate campus.

Wellness:
The building amenities and units were carefully designed to provide students with a healthy, in­
teractive and exciting living environment that supports both academic growth, and contributes to
their well-being and sense of place on campus. This is their home, and their neighborhood.
Laundry and study facilities are integrated with recreation areas, casual lounges and access to
fitness, music and a rich variety of social spaces. Compartmentalization, low V0C flooring, and
advanced filtration were used to ensure high indoor environmental quality. Project Team
OWNER: American Campus Communities
Every residential apartment unit has wall-mounted bike storage for a capacity totaling 590 bikes
ARCHITECT OF RECORD: CUBE 3 Studio
(74 percent of building residents). Additionally, the Project will have a common secured resident
DESIGN CONSULTANT: Elkus Manfredi
bike storage room at the ground floor for 44 bikes that will
LEED CONSULTING: Price Sustainability
include a self-service bicycle repair station. There will be
GENERAL CONTRACTOR: John Moriarty & Associates
another 48 bike spaces for building visitors
LEED and retail customers distributed around the site.
INTERIOR DESIGN: Sixthriver Architects
STRUCTURAL: McNamara Salvia
This project is tracking to be certified as LEED Platinum for

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Homes Pilot Program and is currently finalizing verifications.
Energy: CIVIL: Nitsch Engineering
LANDSCAPE: Copley Wolf
This building is achieving an evergy cost savings of 22% com­
It will be the first LEED for Homes Platinum high-rise student MEP/FP: AKF Engineers
pared to ASHRAE 90.1-2007
apartments in Boston. CODE: Cosentini Associates

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Energy efficient features include: High-performance building en­ WATERPROOFING: Simpson Gumpertz & Heger
Sustainable Project Facts:

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closure with Air Barrier and Low Li-Factor windows, low-albedo PERMITTING (BPDA): Epsilon Associates
• Public Transportation Access

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roof, Energy Star appliances, High-efficacy LED lighting and room ACOUSTICS: Acentech
• Bicycle Storage for >1 5% of residents
occupancy sensors throughout. Upon moving in, each student is LIGHTING: BR+A
• Preferred Location - Infill Site
• Outstanding Community Resources given a one hour tour of the sustainable features of the building.

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• Access to Open Space

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• Reduced Heat Island Effect, Roof Water:
• Very High Density Development (345 units/acre] Water efficiency features include: High-efficiency low-water laun­

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• Water Use Reduction

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dry machines and low-flow water fixtures - showerheads, lavatory

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• Optimized Energy Performance
faucets, and toilets.

LEED for Homes Mid-rise Project Checklist 1


for Homes Builder Name: Northeastern University

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Project Team Leader: James Spiegel, CUBE3
Home Address (Street/City/State): 744 Columbus Ave., Boston, MA

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Project Description Adjusted Certification Thresholds

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Building Type: Mid-rise multi-family # of stories: 22 Certified: 35.0 Gold: 65.0

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# of Units: 211 Avg, Home Size Adjustment: -10.0 Silver: 50.0 Platinum: 80.0

Project Point Total Final Credit Category Point Totals


Prelim: 81.5 + 11.5 maybe Final: 81.5 JD: 5 SS: 22 EA: 11 EQ: 17

Certification Level LL: 9 WE: 8 MR: 6.5 AE: 3


Prelim: Pl.ltinum Final: Platinum
ONE POST OFFICE SQUARE REPOSITIONING #6

One Post Office Square, Boston, MA The repositioning is targeting LEED Gold V4 and
will include air and water side economizers for
1,200,000 sq ft
Gensler is transforming this 1980s building into
winter time free cooling, 95% efficient gas-
fired boilers with hot water heat available for
EUI LPD
a premiere office experience on one of America’s
oldest urban landscapes. With a full facade
tenant use, and a high-efficiency chiller plant
with chilled water available for tenant cooling at
33.8 0.82
renovation and an 18-story addition, this structure the core.
will become a beacon in the bustling heart
of Boston.
PROJECT TEAM

The upgraded design will be clad in a state of the Architect Gensler
art, unitized curtainwall. Triple glazed with high
MEP/FP Engineer NV5
performance coatings, this feature will be paired
with an active chilled beam MEP system to make Structural Engineer LeMessurier Consultants
this building one of the highest environmentally
performing properties of its kind in Boston. Environmental Consultant Paladino and Company

BEFORE

AFTER

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