GREEN LAB: A STRATEGIC DESIGN FRAMEWORK TO DEVELOP SUSTAINABLE RESEARCH LABORATORIES
Conference Paper
Publication Date:
2012
abstract:
The aim of this paper is to present a system of design strategies, useful to technical institutes and universities, that
endeavor to create more environmentally and socially sustainable laboratory spaces.
The Green Lab model is designed to promote sustainable education throughout the complete life cycle of smart
buildings. This requires a critical departure from traditional practices, starting at the formative stage, as defined by
Edward Mazria's 2010 Imperative and 2030 Challenge: first the change required in education, making ecological literacy
a central tenet; then the change enabled in design, required to reduce CO2 emissions by building activity by 50%. Green
Lab assumes an alternative approach to design education, to deliver different results - rendering the education process
itself innovative, interactive and sustainable, and demanding smart buildings with the same characteristics.
The Green Lab methodology has been developed through teaching and research experience, providing a forum to apply
and test design principles and innovative construction technologies as well as an occasion to propose a shift in cultural
paradigm, so that university and research institutions themselves become prototypes in the field of sustainable building
and energy technologies. The building project must constitute an innovation epicenter for the study of sustainable
technologies, representing in itself a testing ground for advanced "solutions in progress" which are continually integrated,
evaluated and replaced.
The result of this sustainable education model is the design of an architectural organism conceived according to
bioclimatic strategies for minimal environmental impact, using recycled materials and meeting the highest standards of
energy efficiency - a Green Lab capable of sustaining itself, generating energy from renewable sources via its form,
surfaces and volumes. The knowledge base of the design laboratory is in constant expansion, requiring active research
contributions (via dedicated website DiarAmbiente) from all participants: students, professors, architects, engineers, and
national researchers collaborate directly to maintain a highly dynamic multilateral learning environment, keeping the
moving target of sustainable design in focus. Its outcomes are high-level design projects, demonstrating increased
consciousness and commitment to sustainable building.
Iris type:
04.01 Contributo in Atti di convegno
List of contributors:
Gigliarelli, Elena
Book title:
Proceedings of 11th International Conference on Sustainable Energy Technologies