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San Francisco Building to Raise the Bar on Sustainability
KMD Architects' 'green'
design for Public Utilities Commission headquarters set to
exceed LEED Platinum, go off grid and minimize carbon
footprint.
SAN FRANCISCO, June 8
/PRNewswire/ -- KMD Architects' design for a new 12-story
headquarters for the San Francisco Public Utilities Commission
is expected to be a leader in demonstrating energy efficiency,
water recycling and reduced carbon footprint among major
office buildings nationally, according to P.U.C. officials.
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KMD
Architects' design for a new 12-story headquarters for
the San Francisco Public Utilities Commission is
expected to be leader in demonstrating energy
efficiency, water recycling and reduced carbon
footprint. "Our intent was to create the most
energy-efficient office building developed in an urban
setting in the United Statesto date," said P.U.C. deputy
general manager Anthony Irons. Wind turbines, solar
panels, and a natural-cooling "thermal chimney" help it
supply 40 percent of its own energy needs. (PRNewsFoto/KMD
Architects) SAN
FRANCISCO, CA UNITED STATES 06/08/2007 |
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"What better organization
than a major municipal power and water agency to create one of
the most advanced buildings in green design in the U.S.," said
David Hobstetter, KMD principal.
"Our intent from the
beginning was to create the most energy-efficient office
building developed in an urban setting in the United Statesto
date," said P.U.C. deputy general manager Anthony Irons. The
$178 million, 254,000-square foot headquarters will include
features uncommon in buildings today, but "would be
commonplace in years to come," he said. Officials say
construction will be paid by selling surplus real estate
holdings and by issuing bonds against future rent savings, not
by funds from rate-paying customers.
Dozens of wind turbines on
the roof, solar panels embedded in outer walls, and a
natural-cooling "thermal chimney" are among the features
enabling the structure to supply 40 percent of its own energy
needs, said Hobstetter. On windy, sunlit days, it will go off
the power grid completely.
"The SF PUC headquarters is
the type of well-proportioned, elegant project that reveals
the next wave of thinking by designers and planners in which
the building is seen as a component of its natural setting.
The possibilities for innovation are limitless; just think of
a city that regenerates rather than depletes its natural
resources," said Lisa Sullivan, Director of Publications,
"Places: Forum of Design for the Public Realm", a journal
sponsored by a consortium of design schools including U.C.-Berkeley,
the Pratt Institute and M.I.T.
Planned to break ground at
525 Golden Gate Ave. near City Hall in 2008, the P.U.C.
headquarters also employs advanced water-saving and water-
recycling. Faucet sensors, waterless urinals, and on-demand
water heaters will cut use to 5 gallons per occupant per day,
compared to average office-building use of 25 gallons a day. A
grey-water wastewater recycling system enables reuse of water
from faucets and sinks in the building's toilets and the
cooling system.
While water and power
efficiencies were the P.U.C's primary goals, the new
headquarters will also employ leading-edge design concepts in
enhancing human performance, said Hobstetter.
"Dozens of research studies
have confirmed the benefits of natural daylight and views of
greenspace in improving a person's productivity, reducing
absenteeism and improving health and well-being," said
Hobstetter. "By utilizing sun-filtering shades, new
window-glazing materials and other techniques, we were able to
bring sunlight well inside the structure's interior work
spaces."
"Energy efficiency is one
thing, it can be accomplished with smart technology; it is
easily measured," said Ryan Stevens Design Principal at KMD.
"We want to go one step further and provide a work space that
will contribute to preserving the environment, foster
interaction, creativity and productivity and also inspire the
community."
The building is designed to
exceed LEEDs-Platinum, and will exceed California's
recently-instituted Title 24 requirements for energy
efficiency in new office buildings by 60 percent, he
concluded.
About KMD
Since 1963, KMD (Kaplan
McLaughlin Diaz) has combined innovation and creativity to
provide exceptional healthcare, academic, commercial and
corporate architectural services. With offices in Mexico City,
Shanghai, Portland, Seattle, San Francisco and Los Angeles,
and projects throughout the world, KMD believes that
experimentation and investigation of interpersonal interaction
with the built environment are central to their work as
architects, planners and researchers.
A leader in green building
and sustainable design, KMD designs have been completed in
over 30 US states, and 15 countries around the world including
France, China, Japan, Korea, Spain, Germany, England and
Mexico and have won over 200 design awards, including over
forty from AIA (American Institute of Architects). The
company's web site is at
http://www.kmdarchitects.com/.
Source: KMD Architects
CONTACT: Ron Heckmann,
+1-510-652-5800,
ron@heckmanncommunications.com,
for KMD
Web site:
http://www.kmdarchitects.com/
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