Sanjay Gangal Sanjay Gangal is the President of IBSystems, the parent company of AECCafe.com, MCADCafe, EDACafe.Com, GISCafe.Com, and ShareCG.Com.
West Berkeley Public Library in California by Harley Ellis Devereaux
August 30th, 2015 by Sanjay Gangal
Article source: Harley Ellis Devereaux
The City of Berkeley sought to construct a library that would both serve as a model for sustainable design as well as a community hub for its culturally diverse neighborhood. With the existing library spatially out of date for contemporary requirements and future adaptability, the design team recommended the construction of a new zero net energy (ZNE) structure. Extensive study had revealed the embodied energy required to construct a new ZNE facility would be offset by the ongoing cost of maintaining the existing structure within one year’s time.
Based on these findings, the city embraced the creation of a new ZNE library that would be both cost-efficient and in line with the city’s ambitious climate action plan. To achieve ZNE status, the design team minimized the building’s energy footprint through a high performance building envelope, daylighting and passive design strategies. Among the building’s unique and innovative features is a wind chimney that was designed to pull in the steady ocean breeze and act as an engine to draw natural ventilation through the building. The team also optimized onsite renewable energy production with solar panels on a compact roof. By relying on radiant heating and cooling, the building is comfortable without traditional HVAC. As a result of these passive design strategies, the library is the first certified Living Building Challenge ZNE public library in California and is on track to produce more energy than it consumes.
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