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Σάββατο 4 Δεκεμβρίου 2010

Straw Bale Eco Center / Students of Ball State University Deptartment of Architecture

Courtesy of 
Located on an 80 acre field station on the prairie of  the Straw Bale Eco Centerwas a community project between Ball State University Department of Architecture students, professors, building professionals, elementary school students and the general public. The classroom and ecology center was a project of complete collaboration, resulting in immersion learning, education outreach and research initiatives, it is the first carbon neutral load bearing straw bale public building in the region.
The Straw Bale Eco Center was awarded the 2008 Merit Award for Excellence in Architectural Design by , 2008 Alternative Power and Energy Award, 2008 Accent on Architecture Award, and 2007 Green Building Initiative Award.
More photographs and drawings following the break.
   
Architects: Students of  Deptartment of Architecture; Faculty Coordinator Timothy Gray, Gray Architecture

Location: 5800 Bethel Avenue 
Client: Field Station Oversight Committee, 
Project Area: 500 sqf 
Project Year: 2008-2009
Photographs: Courtesy of 
Drawings: Dan Bajor

Courtesy of 
site water plan
One of the great challenges facing the next generation of architects is to understand and embrace the principals of sustainable practices while at the same time applying these principals in creative ways, embracing their potential for design. The Straw Bale Eco Center is one groups ongoing effort address this challenge through a combination of immersive learning, educational outreach and research initiatives.
assembly
The Eco Center is intended to promote awareness of issues related to sustainable development to a broad audience which includes  students, grade school students, building professionals and the general public. The project was designed, documented and constructed in collaboration with three separate interdisciplinary groups of BSU Students, and was initially funded with a $10,000 grant from the Environmental Protection Agency. The Eco Center, completed in 2009 after raising close to $60,000 through a combination of grants, donations and industry partnerships, represents the first load bearing straw bale building as well as one of the first carbon – neutral public facilities in the region. The project generates all of its own power and monitors the performance of alternative energy systems on site, including photovoltaic, solar hot water and wind power.
Courtesy of 
The Eco Center is located on an 80 acre “field station”, sited at the edge of a restored prairie in. One of the primary uses of the facility is to stage student and community environmental tours of the site. In addition to satisfying the practical need for a staging area for these tours, the Eco Center is itself an educational tool; intended to extend the discussion of the natural landscape to that of the built environment and highlight the potential for synergies between the two.
Courtesy of 
The Eco Center finds its aesthetic identity, its sense of beauty, by navigating within a very specific set of criteria generated by the site, the project “circumstance” and the sustainable agenda. Contributors explored and came to understand the potential for design in the materials and assemblies, came to understand the act of making and the act of design as being inextricably intertwined, and in so doing created a work that is genuine and rooted to its place. Contributors have created a work which attempts to frame a way of thinking that is simultaneously local and global, a small work which aspires to share a large message with a broad audience.
section
Project Team
Architecture: Andrew Adegbamigbe, Matthew T. Amore, Evan T. Anderson-Decina, Alonso Arambula, Dan Bajor, Adam Buente, Elizabeth Boone, Geoffrey A. Burns, Jagjeet S. Chahal, Dan Chase, Andrew Cranford, Justin Coffman, Jessica Coleman, Michelle Costello, Geoffrey S. Desmit, Lindsey Eckstein, Christopher Eldridge, Todd M. Ernstberger, Merritt M. Ertel, Sergio Luis Freiberg, Adam Fritschle, Luke J. Geers, Eric Gerding, Caitlin Goodwin, Brandon Gore, Megan Griffith, Teresa Klingensmith Haines, Joshua T. Higginbotham, Brandon M. Hoopingarner, Jeremy Hostetler, John L. Hudson, Megan M. Leder, Michael Loy

Joseph Martin, Stephanie L. McLeish, Martin A. Merkel, Jennifer Millikan, Derek Mills, Yvgen Monokhov, Jessica Mullendore, Clarissa c de Oliveria, Brian W. Pace, Emily Parker, Logan U. Parmele, Wesley W. Perkins, Michael D. Powers, Joshua D. Reitz, Whitney Ruckel, Martin D. Sams, Alcario Samudio, Tyler J. Sanders, Johanna Senott, Sarah Shelley, Bradley J. Singer, Patrick W. Steffen, Chelsea A. Wait, Jon Wiegand, Joel Young, Nathan R. Ziulkowski
Landscape Architecture: Ryan J. Alexander, Sharon M. Dougherty, Brad R. Faichild, Lawrence T. Fettig, Emily K. Harner, Joshua Keen, Alisha R. Koester, Bradley A. Kottkamp, Amy L. Lewis, Josh T. Manwaring, Cory McCurdy, Jason M. Reier, Justin A Russell, Corey R. Seltenright, Kelly A Woodward
Natural Resources & Environmental Management: Daniel A. Dyson and Kendra Frost
Interior Design: Alicia A. Hall
Political Science: David M. Cain
Pre-Journalism: Lauren Kenley
Faculty: Timothy Gray, Associate Professor of Architecture and Dr. John Motloch, Professor of Landscape Architecture


* Location to be used only as a reference. It could indicate city/country but not exact address. 




Source:
http://www.archdaily.com/92521/straw-bale-eco-center-students-of-ball-state-university-deptartment-of-architecture/

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