NewsForChange, Wisconsin students enjoy eco-friendly dorm
Wesley Roe and Marjorie Lakin Erickson
lakinroe at silcom.com
Mon Oct 2 05:42:38 PDT 2000
http://www.workingforchange.com/news/article.cfm?ItemId=7683
Wisconsin students enjoy eco-friendly dorm
ASSOCIATED PRESS
9.28.00 | ASHLAND, Wis. -- Dorm life is a little different for 90 students
at Northland College: their ``living laboratory'' features a 120-foot-tall
wind generator, solar panels, recycled furniture and waterless toilets.
The small liberal arts college near Lake Superior touts its $4.1 million
Environmental Living and Learning Center as one of the most advanced
``green'' residence halls in the United States.
``It's great - it's such a way of life already,'' said Kelsey Forrest, 19,
of Burnsville, Minn. An environmental studies major, she shares an
apartment in the dormitory with five other women.
When Northland began considering a new dorm several years ago, students
insisted it be environmentally efficient.
``Students were saying, 'Don't just teach us. Show us,''' said Tom
Wojciechowski, the director of student development.
The dorm opened in 1998. Among its features:
-About 8 percent of its electricity is generated by the 20-kilowatt wind
tower and three solar arrays.
-Fourteen solar panels on the roof preheat hot water, cutting those costs
nearly 30 percent.
-Some furniture, including the bed frames, desks and bathroom counters, is
made from recycled milk jugs or soybean hulls and newsprint.
-Organic-based linoleum covers the floor instead of petroleum-based vinyl.
A handwritten sign above one of the waterless compost toilets would have
been pertinent decades ago in an outhouse:
``Hey composter: Remember to put a handful of wood chips in and close the
lid when done.''
Rich Hackner, associate director of the Energy Center of Wisconsin, a
nonprofit corporation that promotes energy efficiency, said he knew of no
other college dorm in the United States with so many eco-friendly features.
``They are on the cutting edge,''' he said. ``It is a living laboratory.''
The U.S. Energy Department's Center of Excellence for Sustainable
Development lists the dorm as one of 26 ``success stories'' for commercial
projects in the United States.
Many universities have other types of specialty dorms, based on language
interests, ethnic background, even pledges to shun tobacco, alcohol and
drugs. Environmentally friendly dorms may be a trend of the future.
Furman University in Greenville, S.C., opened an Eco Cottage this fall.
Eight students use only recycled paper products, monitor the environmental
effect of their food and toiletry purchases, and limit energy and water
consumption, in part by using a low-impact faucet.
Christine Ervin, president of U.S. Green Building Council, said the
council's 510 members include Northland and 27 other colleges and
universities.
``I would be surprised if we did not have another 25 in six months,'' she
said. ``The university community is demonstrating some real interest in
green buildings.''
Ali Fischer, president of the U.S. Student Association, said many
cash-strapped colleges are content to have buildings that don't leak, never
mind eco-friendly buildings.
``You would be pretty hard-pressed to find many other dorms like that,''
Fischer said of Northland's project. ``I wouldn't say it is a sweeping
movement.''
At Northland, which has about 800 students, Forrest lives in one of two
apartments in the new dorm with the composting toilets. Her apartment also
contains a digital meter to encourage daily monitoring of electricity usage.
Forrest's rooming fees are $2,400 for the school year, slightly more than
for other dorms on campus, but she has no qualms about her choice.
``I am glad I am doing it,'' she said. ``There's a lot more we can do, and
I think this is a good starting point.''
The two-story dorm features three wings, some with windows facing southward
to collect as much solar warmth as possible in a climate where winter
normally begins in November and lingers through March. Students can grow
plants in two greenhouses.
Brian Amones, a senior from Plymouth, Ind., has lived in the eco-dorm since
it opened in 1998.
``The lesson to be drawn is it can be done,'' he said. ``The only thing
stopping you is the resolve to do it. It provides examples for the rest of
the country.''
Jeremiah Manzer, 22, a senior from Owego, N.Y., said living in the dorm has
made him more ecology-conscious.
``I don't even pick up a foam cup,'' he said. ``My parents hate it because
I won't use foam in their own house.''
On the Net:
Northland College: http://www.northland.edu
U.S. Green Building Council: http://www.usgbc.org
Copyright 2000 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not
be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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