VCU kicks off Year of the Environment this week

» 3 Comments | Post a Comment

The Year of the Environment begins Thursday at Virginia Commonwealth University with a two-day E-Festival that includes a sustainability symposium and the chance to paint a Dumpster.

At the University of Richmond, students are using pedal power to get around the 350-acre campus, borrowing green bicycles with sturdy tires and big handlebars available for anyone to use.

A lot of energy is going into saving energy at colleges this semester: James Madison University students are generating electricity at the gym as they work out on elliptical machines.

At VCU, fraternity and sorority volunteers helped collect more than 7,000 pounds of cardboard boxes and 3,000 plastic water bottles for recycling as students moved into residence halls last month.

VCU's Year of the Environment officially begins Thursday with a reception at the Rice Center and the E-Festival, a science festival sponsored by the university's Science, Technology and Society Initiative.

The reception is invitation-only, but the E-Festival -- the E stands for energy, environment and engagement -- is free to the public.

It's an effort to draw the community into discussions about different ways to think about common problems and how science and technology can be part of the solution, said Karen A. Rader, director of the STS Initiative and an associate professor of history.

"We're hoping to get people talking across divides that often separate," she said.

The events start at 3:30 p.m. Thursday with a screening of the film "The Next Industrial Revolution" at the Grace Street Theatre, followed at 6 p.m. by the painting of the Dumpster at the former Ukrop's store at Grace and Harrison streets.

The container will be filled with construction debris that can be recycled by art students for projects, Rader said.

Friday's events include a daylong symposium at the Student Commons and conclude with a staged reading at 7:30 p.m. at the Grace Street Theatre of "Louis Slotin Sonata," a play about the radioactive poisoning death of a nuclear physicist that explores the responsibilities of science.

The increase in campus activities comes as schools work to meet pledges to fight global warming, either on their own or through the American College & University Presidents Climate Commitment.

VCU, which signed the national pledge, hopes to complete a climate-action plan by May and has a goal of carbon neutrality by 2050.

The College of William and Mary, which did not sign but established a sustainability committee, said it has reduced carbon emissions by 16 percent per square foot of building space since 2002.

This month, the State Board for the Virginia Community College System adopted a 12-step plan with the goal that "sustainability will become second-nature to the VCCS," said Wytheville Community College President Charlie White, chairman of the task force that came up with the guidelines.

The plan will establish a scholars program incorporating sustainability into the curriculum.

At JMU, 17 elliptical machines have been retrofitted to recycle energy for the university's electrical grid. The machines use ReCardio technology to capture 97 percent of the energy produced in a workout for the power grid.

According to the manufacturer, ReRev, a 30-minute workout produces 50 watt hours of electricity, about enough to run a laptop for an hour.

Christie-Joy Brodrick Hartman, executive director of JMU's Institute for Stewardship of the Natural World, said JMU is conducting tests to see how much energy is being generated.

Six of the machines are being used in a wellness laboratory, with the others available for workouts at the fitness center.

Hartman described it as a living laboratory that "immerses students in environmental stewardship via everyday experiences."

UR's Green Bike program has made available 35 beach-style cruisers for students, faculty and campus visitors.

The only rules: The bikes can't be locked up or taken off campus, said Tom Roberts, UR director of recreation and wellness.

They're being heavily used, he said. Roberts rides one himself to travel from the Weinstein Center to the student commons, about a mile by car but only one-third that distance by bike.

"It's pretty liberating to jump on that bike and go down that hill," he said.



Contact Karin Kapsidelis at (804) 649-6119 or .

Advertisement

 

Advertisement

Reader Reactions

Flag Comment Posted by squier13 on September 28, 2009 at 9:42 am

I agree with yeahright, where is the bicycle infrastructure? VCU has greatly subsidized car driving on campus by constructing thousands of parking spaces, yet there are too few bike racks on campus and some buildings have no racks at all. VCU certainly has the power to work with the city to enhance bicycle infrastructure and it would be more meaningful than a painted dumpster.

I want to see VCU work with the city to construct an east-west bicycle route that would safely convey cyclists between MCV, VCU, and Carytown. They should also upgrade and expand bicycle parking at every building on campus! VCU has a unique opportunity as an urban campus to lead Virginia universities in this area but we aren’t taking advantage of it.

Flag Comment Posted by yeahright on September 28, 2009 at 8:28 am

All of this is nice and fluffy but as an employee/student it is somewhat misleading. I spent the better part of a couple hours of my time trying to figure out who at VCU was in charge of implementing and tracking Gov. Kaines’ executive order 82 at the university and never got a call back from facilities management who apparently is the one who handles it. If the university can’t even track steps being taken to implement the Gov. executive order than why are they going out of their way to get puff pieces like this covered by the TD? Furthermore, I ride my bike to work and used to bring it in the building (and store it in an unused, spare office) until a administrator asked me not to do so anymore. Here is a link to VCU police policy on bringing bicycles in buildings, it’s not allowed. http://www.vcu.edu/police/docs/bpg.pdf
So we are supposed to believe that painting a dumpster with toxic chemicals is a way to improve the environment when simple actions like commuting by bicycle are discouraged by the university and their policies? Allowing employees to bring their bicycles in the building, or providing bicycle racks that meet international standards (which most of the ones at VCU do not) would be an easy first step to promote green lifestyles. Furthermore, having a tracking system that is universally available to the university community and seeks to implement the Govs. executive order would be another important step in improving “green” initiatives. Meanwhile you can keep your dumpster art projects as puff but for those of us who actually want to take concrete steps to improve the environmental impact we make we will continued to be stonewalled by the university and it’s draconian policies on bicycle usage.

Flag Comment Posted by Scott Burger on September 28, 2009 at 8:27 am

We need to hold local leadership more accountable.

For example, VCU says it is holding off (read: stalling) on a lot of it’s renewable energy plans while it evaluates its ‘carbon neutral’ plan. It has set some sort of renewable energy committment to 40 years from now. Granted, Trani’s expansionism has left Rao without much, if any, room in VCU’s physical plant budget, but let’s hear him commit to more renewable energy.

Its not just VCU either. It kills me to see City Council people get up and speak on this topic while so many municipal and public buildings lack solar. Think about it- Richmond just opened this huge performing arts complex for millions and millions of taxpayer dollars and yet where is the green building and solar panels for it? NJ and other states are far, far ahead in putting solar on top of their public school buildings, improving facilities and saving taxpayers millions over time. We need students and citizens to speak up and DEMAND renewable energy (in Richmond, that largely means types of solar) NOW!

Dominion Power gives most of the local politicians campaign donations, and if we expect Dominion to lead with renewable energy, we will be waiting a long, long time. Remember, their Enron-style trading floor on the James River was designed with a sloping south-facing roof line with solar in mind by the architect, but when the time came for Dominion to buy the panels for it, they balked.

Keep pushing for clean energy NOW!!!!!!!!!

Post a Comment(Requires free registration)

  • Please avoid offensive, vulgar, or hateful language.
  • Respect others.
  • Use the "Flag Comment" link when necessary.
  • See the Terms and Conditions for details.
Click here to post a comment.

 

Advertisement

Advertisement

Online Features
Blogs
DataCenter
Videos
Weekend
 

Advertisement