Here’s one material handling supplier’s take on creating greener products inside the building. Plus, more education for the educators.
A warehouse is not a structure generally
associated with the terms “green” or
“sustainable.” Yet, what once were
buzzwords are now key issues in the world
of industrial development—including the
modern warehousing facility. Following the lead of the
U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC), warehouse
customers are seeking ways to create more green
buildings: redeveloping existing structures, using recycled
or environmentally-conscious construction and lighting
products, reducing emissions, installing renewable energy
systems and exploring more efficient use of space and
new technologies. Among the technologies available to the
warehouse customer is Westfalia’s (York, Pa.) multipledeep
automated storage and retrieval system (AS/RS).While many AS/RS providers offer double-deep options,
Westfalia offers systems that can store from one to 12
pallets deep.
With a multiple-deep AS/RS, customers can
maximize available storage
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space with smaller building
footprints, which results in less environmental impact
to the surrounding area as well as construction
savings. In terms of energy savings, a taller, more
efficient warehouse saves up to 30% in cooling costs
for refrigerated warehouses, while an automated
warehouse requires less lighting. Patented regenerative
braking on the company’s S/R machines pushes energy
back to the grid, saving more money and reducing the
facility’s carbon footprint.
An AS/RS can increase accuracy while reducing product
damage, waste and labor costs, as well.
Educators Learn About Green Buildings
The U.S. Green Building Council has launched a
program to create healthy, efficient, green schools.
Dozens of architects, PTA presidents, school board
members, school superintendents and others from
across the country are ready to begin a grassroots effort to
further the vision of green schools for every child within
a generation.
Some 64 “Green School Advocates” from U.S. Green
Building Council (USGBC) chapters nationwide were
in Washington recently to receive training to go back to
their communities and organize green school committees.
Local chapter “Green Schools Advocacy Committees” will
work with decision makers, parents, teachers and others
who are passionate about giving children the healthiest,
safest places to learn and grow—all while saving school
districts money, contributing toward mitigating climate
change and improving the environment.
“The local USGBC chapters are a critical component in
the council’s vision of green schools for every child within
a generation,” says Rick Fedrizzi, USGBC’s president,
CEOand founding chair. “There are now chapter
members from across America who are engaging in local
outreach and education.”
A 2006 study sponsored by the American Federation
of Teachers, the American Institute of Architects, the
American Lung Association, the Federation of American
Scientists and USGBC found that building green would
save an average school $100,000 each year in energy costs alone—enough to hire two new additional full-time
teachers, purchase 5,000 new textbooks or buy 500
new computers.
Green schools have a superior indoor environment,
with clean, fresh air, free of dangerous chemicals
from everyday products like carpets, paints and
cleaning materials. They make use of as much
natural daylight as possible, maximizing
students’ ability to concentrate and stay
physically and emotionally healthy, while
at the same time, dramatically reducing
energy costs and greenhouse gas emissions.
On average, green schools use 33% less energy
and 32% less water than conventional schools, which
would bring the U.S. closer to reducing reliance on
imported energy.
Green schools’ better lighting, temperature control,
ventilation and indoor air quality contribute to reduced
asthma, colds, flu and absenteeism, helping improve
learning, test scores and lifetime student earnings.
Greening all school construction would also create
more than 2,000 new jobs each year from increased use
of energy-efficient technologies. And, green schools
improve teacher retention.
The new green-school advocates left Washington
equipped with the knowledge and information
they need to spread the word about green
schools. They are more familiar with the
USGBC’s LEED (Leadership in Energy
and Environmental Design) for Schools
green rating system, which provides greenbuilding
guidelines and offers third-party
verification to ensure school stakeholders that
their buildings incorporate the best in science,
design and technology to make their schools truly
green.
The LEED for Schools rating system was launched
by the USGBC in the spring of 2007 and has currently
certified 60 schools. Additionally, there are more than
350 school buildings that are in the LEED certification
process and plan to certify upon completion of
construction.
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