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Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute and Skidmore, Owings & Merrill LLP Announce Launch of Center for Architecture Science and Ecology
Launch for this green collaboration held at Seven
World Trade Center
On Friday, November 14, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute and
the renowned architecture firm Skidmore, Owings & Merrill
officially launched the Center for Architecture Science and
Ecology (CASE). The launch event, which began with a cocktail
reception at 5 p.m., took place on the 52nd floor of Seven
World Trade Center, designed by SOM, the first building in
North America designed under the LEED Core and Shell criteria.
Rensselaer President Shirley Ann Jackson and Carl Galioto,
Partner-in-Charge of SOM New York’s/Technical Group, were
joined by city and state officials, business leaders,
environmental leaders, academics, and Rensselaer alumni to
celebrate the beginning of this major new
collaboration.
Headquartered at SOM’s offices on Wall Street in lower
Manhattan, CASE is an innovative collaboration that engages
scientists, engineers, and architects from the professional and
academic worlds toward a common goal of redefining how we build
sustainable cities and environments. The idea is to tap and
cultivate the talents of a new generation of architects,
thinkers, and planners and turn out sustainable and
energy-efficient solutions to today’s environmental challenges
in the global building sector, which accounts for more than one
third of energy consumption and nearly 40 percent of carbon
production.
Rensselaer’s School of Architecture has framed its advanced
degree program in Built Ecologies, focused on the development
of new building strategies with an emphasis on
energy-efficiency and sustainability, around the CASE.
Approximately 15 master’s and doctoral degree candidates share
residency between the Rensselaer campus and the CASE offices,
working alongside building professionals and post-doctoral
researchers as they develop projects and thesis topics tied to
specific building challenges.
“The most meaningful performative design innovations will be
achieved by collaboration between the leaders in academic
research and transdisciplinary professional practice,” said
Carl Galioto. “Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute and SOM
have come together to create the environment which will advance
building science to the forefront of creative
endeavors.”
“Tackling the global challenges of sustainability and energy
security requires a commitment to innovation, to inquiry, and
to cross-disciplinary collaboration,” said Rensselaer President
Shirley Ann Jackson. “Through the development of innovative
systems and materials that will shift building performance
toward sustainable and energy self-sufficient models,
researchers at the Center for Architecture Science and Ecology
will demonstrate to the world the power that lies at the nexus
of art, design, science, and technology. Two leaders with long
histories of innovation in their fields – Rensselaer
Polytechnic Institute and Skidmore, Owings & Merrill – will
work together to create ecologically sustainable design through
cutting-edge technological experimentation and architectural
work.”
CASE researchers already are developing innovative solutions
to environmental challenges, including a new way to harness
wind power atop aerodynamically shaped buildings, which could
yield 150 percent greater efficiency than existing wind power
systems; a new solar technology for windows that tracks the
position of the sun and converts its light and diverted heat
into storable energy that can be used for heating, cooling, and
lighting buildings; and an architectural method to aid in the
conservation of potable and non-potable water in hot and arid
regions where rainfall is scarce. The launch will include a
gallery exhibition of innovative sustainable building systems
research at CASE.
“As new construction projects increase in emerging global
economies, acceleration in the pace of innovation and
implementation of radically new sustainable technologies
becomes ever more urgent,” says Anna Dyson, director of CASE
and of the Built Ecologies graduate program administered by the
School of Architecture at Rensselaer. “The Center for
Architecture Science and Ecology will provide an environment
for collaboration that supports accelerated innovation and the
incorporation of next-generation architectural technologies
into new building projects.”
Systems research at CASE is currently supported by the New
York State Energy Research and Development Authority (NYSERDA),
the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE), the National Science
Foundation (NSF), and the New York State Foundation for
Science, Technology and Innovation (NYSTAR).
Contacts:
Elizabeth Kubany, SOM
(212) 298-9516
elizabeth.kubany@som.com
Amber Cleveland, Rensselaer
(518) 276-2146
clevea@rpi.edu
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Published
November 14,
2008 | |
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