| 11/14/06
Contact:
Victoria Santos, (334) 844-7186 (santovr@auburn.edu),
or
Mike Clardy, (334) 844-9999 (clardch@auburn.edu)
CHALLENGE
FROM AUS LIBERAL ARTS DEAN RESULTS IN GREEN ROOF PROJECT
AUBURN - When Dean Anna Gramberg of the College of Liberal Arts was recently
approached with a request to fund a speaker on the environment, she countered
with a call for action instead of talk. The result was the student-led
Auburn Sustainability Action Project which gave Auburn Universitys
Haley Center an environmentally-friendly cover of potted plants. The area
is now known as the Green Roof.
Gramberg approached Lindy Biggs, AU professor of history and director
of the Auburn Sustainability Initiative, with an offer to fund a project
that students could get involved in and would improve the environment.
Biggss idea was a sustainability class for a small group of students
chosen through an application process who would receive internship credit
for the class. Gramberg approved the proposal and out of the 40 students
who applied, 14 were accepted.
A team of students in the sustainability class designed the Green Roof,
which is made up of rows of specially potted native plants that will provide
environmental benefits such as reducing atmospheric carbon dioxide and
controlling stormwater runoff and sewage.
I met the selected students and knew they were up to the task of
a project like this, and I was right. Gramberg said. I am
truly impressed by the students involved with this initiative. They are
outstanding, interesting, creative, forward-thinking and bright.
I thank Biggs for her leadership and for her incredible dedication
to sustainability, said Gramberg. She and her students designed
and implemented something the College of Liberal Arts can be proud of.
What they have accomplished will benefit our environment and everyone
who comes to Haley Center. Instead of a slab of concrete, students and
visitors to the Haley Center now have a beautiful green arrangement to
look at and admire.
According to Biggs, the green roof makes fiscal sense as well as being
environmentally friendly and attractive. The plants will slow the roofs
deterioration and extend its life by blocking out harmful ultraviolet
rays.
The average roof reaches temperatures of more than 120 degrees,
while plants never become warmer than 80 degrees. So by insulating the
roof with plants, you are effectively cutting down on energy costs,
said Biggs.
The plants will absorb significant amounts of water and prevent
polluted runoff from going into the drains and sewage systems, said
Valerie Grupp, a political science major who worked as an intern with
the Auburn Sustainability Initiative.
Biggs and her group continue to explore new initiatives such as a student
bike repair shop, a network of bicycle paths on campus and an energy use
study of the library.
For more information about the Auburn Sustainability Initiative, visit
their Web site: http://www.auburn.edu/projects/sustainability/.
Auburn University is a preeminent land-grant and comprehensive research
institution with more than 23,000 students and 6,500 faculty and staff.
Ranked among the top 50 public universities nationally, Auburn offers
more than 230 undergraduate, graduate and doctoral degree programs.
(Submitted by Victoria Santos. Photos available on request.)
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nov06:AU-greenroof
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