USGBC Announces Winners of First Green Building Curriculum Awards
WASHINGTON, D.C. --
The U.S. Green Building Council
(USGBC) has awarded its first annual awards and grants recognizing and
encouraging green building curricula.
The Excellence in Green Building
Curriculum Recognition Awards and Incentive Grants are open to any green
building programs and curricula from pre-K to college level. The Incentive
Grants provide $20,000 for each recipient to develop new curricula.
The USGBC gave its first set of
awards and grants to 12 programs throughout the country, and will compile
information from curricula submissions and make a teaching resource database.
The Recognition Grant recipients are:
- The Council of Educational
Facility Planners’ School Building Week: School of the Future Student Design
Competition, which encourages students to redesign their schools to conserve
resources, enhance learning and be environmentally responsible
- Kentucky Environmental Education
Council’s Kentucky Green & Healthy Schools web-based program which helps
students study the efficiency and sustainability of their schools
- Prescott, Ariz.’s, Yavapai
College’s Residential Building Technology Program, which looks at designing,
building and managing green homes and includes topics like climate-specific
building materials
- Grand Valley State University
campus-wide sustainability initiative, which includes committing to LEED
construction
- University of Texas Austin’s
Alley-Flat Initiative to create small, detached residential units that can be
accessed from Austin’s network of alleys
- University of Virginia’s ecoMOD
project focused on creating ecological, modular and affordable housing units
The Incentive Grants were awarded
to:
- Chicago Architecture Foundation,
for creating a junior/senior level for its Architecture Handbook curriculum
- Youth Learning Academy in
Charlottesville, Va., to develop its Design + Build + Live Green initiative to
promote interest in green construction as a career
- Eastern Iowa Community College
District to make a four-credit green construction course
- Santa Fe Community College to make
on online course to visually document the entire process of building an
energy-efficient house that generates its power off the grid
- Cornell University to make its
Collaborative Green Building Practice course which emphasizes that students to
leave the classroom to meet with authorities, professionals and the public to
learn how key stakeholders play a role in determining building design
- University of Maine Farmington for
establishing a sustainable architecture course that will include the use of the
campus’ two LEED certified buildings
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