Photos of the Bainbridge Island Museum of Art by local photographer David Cohen
Tuesday, August 27, 2013
Monday, August 26, 2013
The Waypoint Park in Pictures
Nearly two years of effort on the part of over 50 volunteers has
culminated with the opening of the award winning Waypoint park. Located
at the corner of Winslow Way and Highway 305, on property co-owned by
the City of Bainbridge Island and Kitsap Transit, The Waypoint is the
first impression for Island visitors and a welcome home to returning
residents. This project reflects the elemental character, history and
sense of place that is Bainbridge Island.
Here are some great new photos of The Waypoint Park taken by local photographer David Cohen.
Here are some great new photos of The Waypoint Park taken by local photographer David Cohen.
Wednesday, August 7, 2013
LETTER TO THE EDITOR - Let’s demand the highest ‘green design’
July 29, 2013 · 8:56 AM
CHRIS MCMASTERS
Bainbridge Island
Bainbridge Island is a leader in sustainability and green design. We have a number of architects, designers and community groups that work to create healthy, vibrant places. It’s brilliant. It’s something we all share and can celebrate.
For example, take a look at the Grow Community development sprouting up in Winslow: It meets stringent One Planet Living Program standards with highly efficient solar powered homes. The development is within walking distance of shops and transit and offers solar-powered cars for neighbors to share when longer trips are desired.
The new Bainbridge Island Museum of Art is another great example. While beautiful for many reasons, this new home for regional creative works serves as a small clean energy power plant. It uses both solar panels and a geothermal heat pump to produce its own clean electricity and like Kids Discovery Museum, it has a vegetated roof to minimize runoff. It will likely earn LEED Gold certification from the U.S. Green Building Council.
Another innovative green building is Wilkes Elementary School. Its geothermal technology is exposed in the media center so students can get a visual of the modern engineering hiding in the building walls and floor. Outside you’ll notice much of the pavement is different – it’s pervious. Instead of sealing the earth and carrying the goo that leaks from our cars into the Sound, the rain will slowly percolate through the pavement and process the toxins naturally. This is good news for those of us who like our seafood sans pollution. The architects in this project used The Living Building Challenge to guide their design.
Click here to read the rest of this letter -->
CHRIS MCMASTERS
Bainbridge Island
To the editor:
Bainbridge Island is a leader in sustainability and green design. We have a number of architects, designers and community groups that work to create healthy, vibrant places. It’s brilliant. It’s something we all share and can celebrate.
For example, take a look at the Grow Community development sprouting up in Winslow: It meets stringent One Planet Living Program standards with highly efficient solar powered homes. The development is within walking distance of shops and transit and offers solar-powered cars for neighbors to share when longer trips are desired.
The new Bainbridge Island Museum of Art is another great example. While beautiful for many reasons, this new home for regional creative works serves as a small clean energy power plant. It uses both solar panels and a geothermal heat pump to produce its own clean electricity and like Kids Discovery Museum, it has a vegetated roof to minimize runoff. It will likely earn LEED Gold certification from the U.S. Green Building Council.
Another innovative green building is Wilkes Elementary School. Its geothermal technology is exposed in the media center so students can get a visual of the modern engineering hiding in the building walls and floor. Outside you’ll notice much of the pavement is different – it’s pervious. Instead of sealing the earth and carrying the goo that leaks from our cars into the Sound, the rain will slowly percolate through the pavement and process the toxins naturally. This is good news for those of us who like our seafood sans pollution. The architects in this project used The Living Building Challenge to guide their design.
Click here to read the rest of this letter -->
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