Friday, February 13, 2009
The Recyclable House
http://www.chicagoreader.com/features/stories/recyclablehouse/
Monday, February 9, 2009
SBA alumni project showcase
SBA Alumni Showcase and Informational Session
Kathleen O'Brien, NaSBAP Director
Kim Hughes, NaSBAP Board Member
Andrea Lewis, NaSBAP Assistant Program Director
Wrap up your Living Futures experience with a lively and informative ‘edu-tainment’ session featuring alumni from the Sustainable Building Advisor (SBA) Course, and representatives from the National Sustainable Building Advisor Program (NaSBAP).
SBA alumni from the Portland, Seattle, and Bend classes will showcase their final team projects – presented in fun and imaginative ways that offer a fresh new take on case study presentation. You’ll also learn about the SBA Course, a nine-month certificate course designed for working professionals interested in designing, building, and maintaining sustainable buildings.
If Living Future has inspired or further stoked your enthusiasm for green building and you are looking for ways to stand out among within your industry, this session about SBA course opportunities is the perfect conference send-off! This event is open to Living Future conference attendees and the general public – so invite your friends to join!
http://www.cascadiagbc.org/living-future/09
Sunday, February 1, 2009
Free Public Lectures at SFU
Admission is free, reservations are required. Email cstudies@sfu.ca or call 778-782.5100.
Venue: SFU at Harbour Centre, 515 West Hastings, Vancouver, unless otherwise noted.
Kitchen Table Sustainability: Transform your community engagement with sustainability
February 5, 7 pm
Wendy Sarkissian
Hong Kong: Cultural Heritage Conservation in a City of Change
February 19, 7 pm
Lynne DiStefano and Dr. Ho Yin Lee, University of Hong Kong
China and the Urbanism of Ambition
March 12, 7 pm
Thomas Campanella, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Co-sponsored by UBC SCARP
The Life and Death of Cities: Accounting for Environmental and Social Sustainability
April 30, 7 pm
Paul James, Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology University
Friday, January 30, 2009
Paint it white
His big idea is based on principles as old as the whitewashed villages that scatter the hills of southern Europe and North Africa. Turn enough of the world's black urban landscape white, he says, and it would reflect enough sunlight to delay global warming, and grant us some precious breathing space in the global struggle to control carbon emissions.
Together, roads and roofs are reckoned to cover more than half the available surfaces in urban areas, which have spread over some 2.4% of the Earth's land area. A mass movement to change their colour, Akbari calculates, would increase the amount of sunlight bounced off our planet by 0.03%. And, he says, that would cool the Earth enough to cancel out the warming caused by 44bn tonnes of CO2 pollution. If you think that sounds like a lot, then you're right. It would wipe out the expected rise in global emissions over the next decade. It won't solve the problem of climate change, Akbari says, but could be a simple and effective weapon to delay its impact - just so long as people start doing it in earnest. "Roofs are going to have to be changed one by one and to make that effort at a very local level, we need to have an organisation in place to make it happen," he says. Groups in several US cities, including Houston, Chicago and Salt Lake City, are on board with his plan, and he is talking to others.
full article here:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2009/jan/16/white-paint-carbon-emissions-climate
Tuesday, January 27, 2009
No Furnaces but Heat Aplenty in ‘Passive Houses’
read full article in the NYT
Tuesday, January 20, 2009
Planning Down: Economic Life Within Ecological Limits
Planning Down: Economic Life Within Ecological Limits
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
October 20-22, 2009
Planning Down places a large project of work before its conference community: to study the gaps between our economic and ecological practices and to build a portrait of a rich community and national life for the near-future in which ecology and economy are more successfully aligned.
In current public debates about climate change, energy transitions, sustainable urban development, and the vulnerability of key ecosystems, the economy is conceived as something apart from, and often in conflict with, environment.
Long-developing habits and prevailing economic thinking—essentially, a philosophy of growth—have fostered this view and allowed us to externalize the ecosystem impacts of consumption; and even now, such impacts are considered as a line item in the economic model.
Nature itself, of course, never was an externality and has been conducting full-cost accounting all along. Numerous thoughtful, expert voices are speaking and writing about this and offering a variety of forecasts and responses.
The conference will feature speakers and thought leaders who are some of the most imaginative and compelling voices on the scene who have been encouraging—in their various fields and perspectives—more conscious and more successful alignments between social practice and the systems of nature that support us. It will highlight positive North American and global examples of social arrangements and economic innovation as proof that a high quality of life and can be broadly crafted and sustained here.