Tag-Archive for » Dallas Green Building «

Wednesday, June 10th, 2009 | Author: admin

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Over the last few weeks Re: Vision Dallas has been a hot topic in the world of sustainability.  We’ve been featured in some of the most popular and influential blogs, media portals and news services.  The following is a list of some of our favorite hits.  Stay tuned as we aren’t done yet.

Tuesday, June 09th, 2009 | Author: admin
 
The Co-Op submitted by Standard
The Co-Op submitted by Standard

The Re: Vision Dallas competition brought out some of the most imaginative and innovative designs the sustainability world has ever seen.  Inhabitat recently ran an article about the Los Angeles based firm Standard’s  work titled the Co-Op, which received honorable mention.  Inspired by ancient Anasazi Indian structures, the Co-op features cliff side housing which surrounds a communal canyon.  In the spirit of the Anasazi tribe, who were known for their connection to the earth through agriculture, the Co-Op includes spaces for community gardens and kitchens.  The emphasis on creating a true community among the 1000 residents is where this design shines.  Inhabitat does a phenomenal job of summarizing the entry and is well worth the read.  Though, the Co-op was not among the 3 finalist, the design will serve to inspire other designers in the future.   

Read the Inhabitat article.

 

*What became of the Anasazi Indians?  Some say a massive drought; some say a war with a rival tribe wiped them out.  I prefer the more logical and entertaining option.  Aliens. 

 

 

Ancient Anasazi structures inspired Standard's design.

 
Ancient Anasazi structures inspired Standard’s design.

Tuesday, December 16th, 2008 | Author: admin

Dwell blog writer Aaron Britt brings us this feature on the recent Re:Vision Dallas design charrette.

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On Friday of last week I attended the Re:Vision Dallas design charrette, one that hopes to remake a blighted city block of downtown Dallas into a haven of sustainable design and a catalyst for urban revitalization.

Having procured a 2.5-acre city block just next to Dallas’ IM Pei–designed City Hall that currently hosts a surface parking lot, Re:Vision Dallas invited dozens of architects, engineers, designers, and city planners to City Hall to discuss the design brief. Before opening it up to a competition amongst the wider design community, the Re:Vision team sought the group’s advice and critical eyes. Though most came from and worked in Texas, many for the City of Dallas itself, participants traveled from as far away as Montana and hailed from all corners of the globe. Eric Cory Freed and Brent Brown were amongst the leaders of the day’s events.

[ Read entire article ]

Tuesday, December 09th, 2008 | Author: interactiv

Larry James of Central Dallas Ministries introduces Tom Leppert. Here’s the video, with transcript to follow.

(Rough) Transcript You’re going to have a lot of fun today. The only downside is that I won’t be here all day. I wish that was the case because I think what you’re going to do is exciting.

When Stacey [Frost] and I first got together and talked about the idea, [building a fully sustainable city block right here in Dallas] was one of those decisions [I found] easy to make. Because I think what you’re going to do is exactly what you need to do… and not only in Dallas but across the nation…

And that’s why I think you’re going to have a lot of fun. In Dallas, we’ve done a couple things that fit in well with the sort of outputs that you’re going to come up with today. And I hope that you perceive Dallas as being in the foreground one of only two cities that have green building standards that literally go across all different kinds of structures: large, small, public private commercial residential. But sustainability to me is much more than that.

Sustainability thinks strategically about how you use space and how you use structures and that goes beyond the green. There are projects in Dallas that I think are examples of that, where its more than a project, its strategically what it does – first the Trinity River project. A lot of times we’ll think of it as being enormous benefits for recreation, transportation, or flood control, those elements. But the biggest part of that isn’t those things that I talked about, the tangibles. It’s the intangibles. It’s the idea that a space in our city that has been historically a divide could all of a sudden bring people together.

Another example of that is the park project which we hope to break ground on in the next couple of months. On the surface, that will be a great park, much like the Bryant park in New York, but more important than the part that all of us will go to use, is the fact that you take a barrier between the downtown elements of Dallas and the uptown arts district and the Victory areas, and all of a sudden instead of an obstacle, its something that ties all those elements together.

And then when you think of development patterns and those sorts of things, they will be much more important than a park element. Largely I hope that’s what you’ll focus on today, because thinking about a block, and I think that’s important, you can get your arms around it. With a block, we can see how to get it done, as opposed to a city, you can get your arms around it and we can understand it and we can see something happen. And in doing that hopefully we can do that strategically not just a as a block but from a historical standpoint, which is exactly what I’d like to see dallas do:

  • Be at the forefront of design, sustainability, and vibrancy of cities .
  • And also be at the point where all of us, in not to long of a period in the future, can see.
  • One of the things that is terrific is the location of the block being right across from city hall.

    citysketch

    So its going to focus on having a lot of people here at city hall on whats happening. I’m awfully excited about it and I appreciate the time and effort you’re putting into this. Again I think its exciting and something that is going to be special for Dallas and it fits in well with what we’re trying to do . Thank you very much for what you’re doing, I think its going to be exiting. Have a great day – you’re going to have a lot of fun, but more importantly you’re going to make a real difference here in Dallas, and I appreciate that.

    Friday, December 05th, 2008 | Author: interactiv

    From Greenbang UK

    How do you make a sprawling city like Dallas more sustainable? The answer might be, “One city block at a time.”

    City officials and urban planners from across the U.S. are meeting in Dallas today for a full-day “Design Charrette,” or an intense sustainability brainstorming session. They hope to end the day with a guidemap for kicking off an international design competition aimed at actually creating such a sustainable block within the city.

    The gathering is being organised by the city of Dallas, the Dallas-based bcWORKSHOP and a San Francisco group, Urban re:Vision.

    “Our job on December 5th is to explore how pivotal the city block is in the urban landscape, and how it can be used as a catalyst for a whole new way of living,” said Stacey Frost, founder of Urban Re:Vision. “This process is one that puts real people first and promotes sustainability.”

    Read the rest at http://www.greenbang.com/6803/dallas-eyes-sustainability-one-block-at-a-time/