Sustainability, Sun and Fun
Media Contacts:
- , (859) 257-1754, x229
- , (859) 257-3303, x235
LEXINGTON, Ky. (Sept. 21, 2009) − The celebration of sustainability
initiatives at the University of Kentucky, Big Blue Goes Green: A Sustainability
Showcase, continues its second week of activities Sept. 20-25. Sponsored by the UK President’s Sustainability Advisory
Committee and the Office of Facilities
Management, the two-week event showcases new opportunities in research and teaching,
business operations, and outreach and community engagement at UK, including a solar house
designed and built at UK that will compete in the U.S.
Department of Energy (DOE) Solar Decathlon competition this October in Washington,
D.C.
As part of Big Blue Goes Green (BBGG), the public is invited to
take a rare tour of UK's solar energy house, the S•KY BLUE House. This tour, scheduled for 3 p.m.
Tuesday, Sept. 22, will give visitors a sneak peek of the house as it is being finished. Tours
of the house will be available at the team's worksite at UK's Electric HVAC Building, located
at 425 Stadium View Drive (#287 on UK
Interactive Map).
Since early 2008, UK's team has been hard at
work designing and constructing the S•KY BLUE House that will compete in the DOE's fourth
biennial solar decathlon. Twenty teams from universities worldwide were selected to create and
send an 800-square-foot or less solar-powered house, built by students on their home campus, to
the National Mall in D.C. The prestigious competition demonstrates homes powered entirely by the
sun do not have to sacrifice modern comforts and appealing features. Each team's house will be
evaluated in the competition in 10 specific areas: architecture, engineering, market viability,
lighting design, communications, comfort, appliances, hot water, energy balance, and home
entertainment.
The team behind UK's solar house, the "Blues" Team, is an
interdisciplinary group comprised of students, faculty and staff from six colleges and 16
centers and departments within UK. The team has been led by two principal investigators, Donald Colliver, professor of biosystems
and agricultural engineering at the College of
Agriculture, and Gregory Luhan,
associate dean for research at the College of Design,
as well as faculty from the College of
Communications and Information Studies and College
of Engineering.
S•KY BLUE House will be fully ADA-compliant
and makes strong reference to the Kentucky vernacular while integrating forward-thinking
innovations into its boundaries. The result is a striking design based upon an open and porous
loft concept anchored by the home’s hearth, the kitchen core, and a series of seamlessly
integrated outdoor rooms that envelope the house to form an engaged
landscape.
After BBGG's public tour, the UK team will finish work on
the home and load the house, solar panels, patio and moving equipment on approximately five
semitrailer trucks bound for the Solar Decathlon competition running Oct. 9-18, at the National
Mall.
If you can't make the tour of the S•KY BLUE House, there
are numerous other activities available to you as part of the second week of Big Blue Goes
Green: A Sustainability Showcase, including a local foods tasting, tours, presentations, a
gardening workshop and an open house on cutting-edge
research.
Additionally, the campus community can participate in the
Sustainability Pledge that focuses on things individuals can do daily that will promote
economic vitality, ecological integrity and social justice. By pledging to undertake some of
these activities individuals are making a commitment to build a sustainable campus for this
generation and for generations to come. Visit www.sustainability.uky.edu and click Take the
Sustainability Pledge.
Some of the other festivities planned for
BBGG's second week include: a presentation on the sustainable city and sustainable university;
a workshop on organic urban gardens; a tour of Lexington's Recycling Center; a meeting of UK's
Greenthumb Environmental Club; an open house featuring exhibits and access to labs and research
on sustainability at the UK Center for Manufacturing; a presentation on climate change; displays
on UK's sustainability activities; a tour of UK's Delta Room, the central monitoring and
dispatch area for main campus; a tour of the McConnell Springs Water Improvement Project; a
viewing of the PBS documentary "Liquid Assets"; and a free tasting of locally grown
foods presented by UK Dining Services.
And after hitting all of the
BBGG events, don't forget to stop by the UK Wildcat Wheels campus Bike Shop to turn in your
student passport and be entered into a drawing to win a free commuter bicycle. The bike shop,
located in the basement of Blazer Hall, will accept passports before 5 p.m. Friday, Sept.
25.
Unless otherwise noted, all BBGG events are free and open to the
public. See www.sustainability.uky.edu for a
detailed schedule.