Page B3.1 . 24 January 2001                     
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    QUIZ

    Elegant Efficiency at Zion Canyon

    by B.J. Novitski

    Out in the beautiful Utah desert, the U.S. National Park Service (NPS) is elegantly demonstrating how bringing the outside in and the inside out can enhance our appreciation of the built and natural environment.

    The 7,600-square-foot (706-square meter) Zion Canyon Visitor and Transportation Center, in Springdale, Utah, is a showcase of efficiency and sustainability for the NPS.

    The new building combines a wide range of technologies, old and new, passive and active. It incorporates daylighting, Trombe walls for solar heating, downdraft "cool towers" for natural ventilation, energy-efficient lighting, and advanced building controls. A roof-mounted photovoltaic system provides backup electrical power.

    Architects at the NPS, headed by James Crockett, and energy experts from the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL), led by Ron Judkoff and Paul Torcellini, teamed up to make the building a model of high efficiency.

    The teams had support from the U.S. Department of Energy's Office of Building Technology, State and Community Programs.

     

    Continue...

    ArchWeek Photo

    At the new Zion Canyon Visitor and Transportation Center, "cool towers" are used for evaporative cooling in the desert climate and give the building a distinctive face.
    Photo: Larry Kilborn

    ArchWeek Photo

    The visitor center features an array of alternative energy design features.
    Image: National Renewable Energy Laboratory

     

    Click on thumbnail images
    to view full-size pictures.

     
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