The Inevitable Solar School: Building the Sustainable Schools of the Future, Today
By (Author) Mark Hanson
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
28th August 2019
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Alternative and renewable energy sources and technology
371.60973
Paperback
176
Width 152mm, Height 220mm, Spine 10mm
249g
The Inevitable Solar School: Building the Sustainable School of the Future, Today describes the two major forces that are driving public and private schools and other buildings to solar energy. These forces are the recognition of climate change and the cost advantage of on-site solar energy. Either force would be sufficient reason on its own to change the school market, but in combination they become indominable.
Sustainability has emerged as a widely accepted theme in school building design. Daylight and views, indoor air quality, responsible life-cycle materials selection, and energy and water efficiency are expected features. This book adds on-site solar energy, sufficient in many instances to meet all of a schools energy requirement, as a critical element of sustainability. The zero energy school is the sustainable school of the future.
Contrary to common expectations, zero energy sustainable schools are being built at costs that are competitive with regional school cost averages. This outcome requires teamwork between school administrators and their design and construction professionals, and the use of deliberate planning and procurement processes. Five case studies spanning the U.S. demonstrate that the sustainable school of the future is here today.
Zero energy buildings are a key strategy for meeting long-term energy and climate objectives. Schools are a great place to start as there are many good examples and they can be a great teaching tool for todays youth who will become the leaders of tomorrow. The Inevitable Solar School provides a road map on why and how to build these schools, including extensive case studies that school administrators and designers can learn from. -- Steven Nadel, Executive Director, American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy (ACEEE)
Mark Hanson has authored a visionary, timely and practical book on the implementation of zero net energy solar schools and buildings. As a professional resource economist, with extensive experience in the building industry, Dr. Hanson provides a motivating hands-on how-to book, with a wealth of technical, financial, and institutional guidelines as well as extensive case studies covering a wide range of school types and locations. This book should be mandatory reading today for school administrators, facility managers, business managers, board members, community members, teachers, students and building professionals who have the opportunity to evaluate and build a zero net energy school, including new buildings and retrofits. -- Dr. Wesley K. Foell, Professor, University of Wisconsin-Madison; Founder and President, Resource Management Associates of Madison
Schools touch the lives of many on a daily basis and nearly everyone has been reached at some time through a school. These buildings are a perfect transition point of shifting buildings from taking to buildings that can give backthrough producing more energy than then consume. There is no reason for schools to be anything but zero energy moving forward, and this book provides the motivation and rationale to help make zero energy schools commonplace. -- Paul Torcellini, Principal Engineer, Commercial Buildings Research Group, National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)
Mark Hanson is an innovator in the design and construction of sustainable commercial buildings including schools. A portfolio of buildings designed and built through collaborative team efforts at Hoffman Planning, Design & Construction and informed by his background at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and the Energy Center of Wisconsin, serve as a laboratory for exploring the path forward for solar schools.