Created: Oct 11, 2007
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"New Green McDonough Project Breaks Ground in Chapel Hill"

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Type: Article
 
Website: www.inhabitat.com/2007/10/10/g...
 
Author: JORGE CHAPA
 
Publisher: Inhabitat
 
Date published: Wed, Oct 10, 2007
 
Country: United States
 
Scale of activity: 7
 

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Greenbridge, the latest super-green mixed-use residential project by William McDonough of Cradle to Cradle fame broke ground on Monday in all its sustainable glory. Located in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, the development will offer 98 condos and retail establishments, green roofs, solar panels, rainwater runoff systems, and even a a community learning center to teach sustainable living practices.

Inspired by McDonough and Braungart’s Cradle to Cradle book, the development will exemplify priorities like waste-to-resource transformation, materiality, and a holistic lifecycle approach to design.

The Greenbridge development consists of 98 residences, a retail area and an underground parking complex, and it’ll wear its sustainability credentials right on its sleeve. Planted roofs, photovoltaic and solar-thermal panels, optimal natural light exposure, fresh air to all units, rainwater runoff catchments, sustainable building materials, bicycle friendly access and construction recycling. It’s all part of a mission statement which puts a focus on environmental sensitivity, social equity and economic vitality.


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This is good to know. What type of things he is currently working on. We need more examples of what is possible. I shook his hand at the awards ceremony for the Solar Decathlon quickly thanking him for the great tools that the Hannover Principles are. Christine Irvin recently wrote a really good piece about Jason McClennan's Living Building Standard in one of the "green building" eltters I get. It's not an armslength away from this type of article/thing from McDonough and is Entirly relevant in discussing where we might ultimatly be going with Green Architecture and Design. Cradle to Cradle/The Philosophy of Sustainable Design not very far from the mark at all. As a student of Planning and Architecture I can say that it will become imperative that we're all on the same page or flowchart or systems design diagram. See: The Sustainability Institute: Primer for Natural Capitalism. That one works incredibly well. Thanks for the update from Mcdonough
Brad McConnell
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