City News

Sustainability

An Energy-Saving Firehouse

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 2012

 

The first city facility constructed as a Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) certified building, a state-of-the-art firehouse, was recently opened at 2211 Semmes Avenue. Firehouse 17 is also the first new fire station in Richmond in 18 years and replaces the firehouse on Bainbridge Street that was built in 1917 for horse-drawn equipment.

The project included a $3.5 million federal grant and $1.4 million of city funding.

"As part of our RVAgreen sustainability program, we are committed to ensuring that any new city building totaling more than 10,000 square feet will be built to at least a LEED Silver certification standard," said Mayor Dwight C. Jones during the grand opening ceremony for the fire station. "We are committed to green buildings because they are cost effective, they operate as healthy places to work, and they are environmentally responsible."

The city's minimum requirement for the fire station was a LEED Silver certification, but Firehouse 17 was submitted for a LEED Gold certification. It  incorporates many "green" features, including a heat pump that detects where in the building people are and allocates heat or air conditioning to those locations, extensive use of natural light, infrared heat that directs itself to people in the vehicle bay, and horizontal bay doors that can open and close in six seconds, letting vehicles in but keeping the cold air out. The toilets are even smart. With a touch of a button, you can allocate just the water you need to flush.
 

Fire Station 17 on Semmes Avenue is state-of-the-art

 

 

Motion detector outer lights come on only when needed with these high-efficiency, LED, shoebox style sight lights for the parking lots.
Large glass doors and windows let in natural light and warmth.
State-of-the-art high efficiency energy recovery heat pumps control heating and air conditioning, directing it to parts of the building that are occupied.
High efficiency compact fluorescent lights in the hallways save energy, use less wattage and last longer.
Sky lights and window panes near the ceiling let natural light in even to the interior of the building.
Exterior office walls are primarily windows for the solar heat and natural light.
Skylights illuminate inner rooms.
Hallway walls are glass, so the light from exterior windows reaches into interior hallways.
Motion detectors know when areas of the building are occupied and need heat or air conditioning.
Thermostats control the heating and air conditioning on a time schedule as well as an occupancy schedule. 
Even the toilets are smart! You can press the green button and flush with a minimum of water, or press the brown button and flush with more water.
The garage bay has infrared heat that detects movement in the bay and directs the heat toward the person.
 

Watch the doors open and close in real time:

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The Delawning Movement

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 2012

As a practical matter, the Chimborazo rain garden has little more than symbolic value. A few square yards of vegetative buffer on a school yard will do little in a city of 60 square miles to curb the problem of urban storm water runoff, stream erosion and pollution in the James River. But it's a start. And it's a visible example of taxpayer dollars at work. The project was funded, with state assistance, by the Richmond Stormwater Utility.

Read the full article on Bacon's Rebellion here.

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Electric Charging Stations -- The Future is Now

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2012

Mayor Dwight C. Jones was joined by Virginia Clean Cities for the opening of Richmond Omni Hotel's first public charging station for electric vehicles. The City of Richmond has been an important partner in the Richmond Electric Vehicle Initiative thanks in part to a grant from the Clean Cities Community Readiness and Planning for Plug-In Electric Vehicles and Charging Infrastructure.

"The RVAgreen Plan supports electric vehicles and charging stations because they provide options that are more economically competitive and environmentally resilient compared to traditional vehicles," said Mayor Jones.

Ford Motor Company chose Richmond as one of the first 25 "EV Ready" cities in the country and a launch market for its all-electric Ford Focus model car. 

"Electric vehicles and infrastructure represent an opportunity for individuals and businesses to advance energy, economic, and environmental security through reducing petroleum,” said Alleyn Harned, executive director of Virginia Clean Cities.

Prior to the official plug-in, Virginia Clean Cities hosted the Business Case for Electric Vehicle Charging Stations Forum at the Omni Hotel. The event provided an overview of electric vehicles and presented the business case for installing electric vehicle charging stations. 

An added benefit of electric cars is the exclusive parking spaces near chargers!

 

Richmond Omni Hotel Manager Chris Alto, Michael Phillips, project manager of the Virginia Clean Cities Project, Mayor Dwight C. Jones, Alicia Zatcoff, sustainability manager for the city, and Jason Tucker, Richmond Ford sales consultant, at the Omni electric car charging station.
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Community Gardens

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 17, 2012

Richmond Grows Gardens, a citywide Community Garden Program, permits organizations to use vacant and underutilized city property for community gardens. Several locations currently offer community garden opportunities where residents can lease plots of land to have their own, personal gardens. 

In addition, Richmond has a Children's Garden where children living in several of the Richmond Redevelopment Housing Authority communities work with volunteers to learn about gardening and local food production. 

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Weatherization Tips Video

 MONDAY, OCTOBER 15, 2012

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 Pleasants Hardware store manager Clay Butler explains some inexpensive, simple things you can do to weatherize your home for winter.

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