| November 5, 2004
Green dorm photos
USC opens world's largest ‘green' dorm
University of South Carolina officials
and students gathered Friday (Nov. 5) to
celebrate the official opening of Carolina's
"green dorm," the largest residence-hall
complex of its kind in the world.
Located at the corner of Sumter and Wheat
streets, the 172,000-square-foot complex
includes three four-story buildings with the
latest technology and environmental features
for conserving water and energy and creating
a healthier, greener environment for the 500
undergraduate students who call it home. It
also boasts an outdoor amphitheater, a
learning center that is powered partly by a
hydrogen fuel cell, a turf roof and a café
that sells healthy foods and environmentally
sensitive products.
USC President Andrew Sorensen said the
residence hall is another example of
Carolina's success in integrating a
first-class living and learning community
for students.
"With West Quad, we've again positioned
the University of South Carolina as a leader
for the state and region on an important
issue -- sustainable development," Sorensen
said. "Not only will West Quad broaden
Carolina students' education as they live
and learn lessons of environmental
responsibility, but it also will be a site
for faculty research on the environment and
next energy and serve as a catalyst for
community and statewide environmental
initiatives.
Officially called the West Quad, USC's
"green dorm" is one of the first newly
constructed green college residence halls in
the United States, said Dr. Gene Luna,
director of University Housing at USC.
Luna says the new West Quad, which was
built with a significant amount of recycled
materials, ranging from the cement blocks
and copper roof to the interior carpet, is
also intended to encourage students to learn
more about their environment.
"Our goal is to raise our students'
awareness of the importance of making
decisions based on environmentally sound
principles for economic and altruistic
reasons and then putting those decisions
into practice," Luna said.
As part of that philosophy, West Quad
includes a 9,000-square-foot living and
learning center that includes meeting rooms
and classrooms where students can take
classes on sustainability, environmental
groups can hold meetings, and faculty can
host conferences. Biology students and
faculty, along with residents, helped grow
and plant drought-resistant, low-growing
greenery as part of an extensive storm-water
filtering and management system.
Luna says he is particularly proud that
West Quad, which cost $30.9 million, was
built for the same cost as a traditional
residence hall, debunking the myth that
building green costs more and setting the
standard for other green college facilities
scheduled to open throughout the United
States in the next several years.
"USC has demonstrated with West Quad that
designing smart, healthy buildings can be
accomplished without added costs," Luna
said. "Furthermore, we will be operating the
complex with significantly reduced utility
costs."
"Green" is a term that describes
environmental practices and buildings that
are more energy-efficient and have a minimal
impact on the environment.
West Quad uses 45 percent less energy and
20 percent less water than similarly sized
traditional residence halls. The heating,
ventilation, cooling, refrigeration and fire
suppression systems are free of
ozone-depleting substances. Water is
preheated by a solar collection system, the
largest of its kind on the East Coast.
Electricity and hot water for the learning
center are generated partly by a
five-kilowatt hydrogen fuel cell, which also
will be used as a teaching tool by
chemical-engineering faculty. The turf roof
on the learning center not only cools the
building by absorbing heat but reduces
rainwater runoff, which improves storm water
management, Luna said.
Special light shelves in the windows
ensure energy efficiency and comfort by
deflecting natural light into the rooms and
reflecting it off the ceiling to light the
room and reduce the heat of direct sunlight.
Interior lights include motion sensors that
automatically turn lights on and off as
people enter and exit a room.
Other green features include low-flow
plumbing, high-efficiency washers and
dryers, a changing room for bicyclists who
commute to campus and lots of outdoor green
space for relaxation.
"We designed this residential living and
learning community so that students can live
comfortably and, at the same time, have the
experience of living in a way that is
environmentally friendly," Luna said. "By
doing so, we hope they will realize that
comfort and ‘green' are not mutually
exclusive."
USC is forging ahead as an emerging
leader in building green. The new Arnold
School of Public Health, scheduled to open
in 2005, also is being built to adhere to
sustainable principles.
USC has registered West Quad with the
U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC) and is
awaiting the council's LEED (Leadership in
Energy and Environmental Design)
certification, which sets and measures
international standards for green buildings.
Only two universities have residence halls
with LEED certification: Carnegie Mellon,
which is 71,000 square feet, and Duke
University, which was renovated to be made
"green."
Once certified, West Quad will be the
third LEED building in South Carolina.
Furman University's Hipp Hall academic
building, and Cox and Dinkins, an
engineering and surveying firm in Columbia,
are LEED certified.
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