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San Francisco debuts North America’s ‘greenest urban office building’

By | June 26, 2012, 3:00 AM PDT

Last week,  the city of San Francisco announced the grand opening of the Greenest Urban Office Building in North America. The new San Francisco Public Utilities Commission Building (SFPUC) boasts new Living Machine technology, as well as LEED Platinum standards.

The 13-floor building can hold around 900 people, but consumes 60 percent less water and 32 percent less energy than most buildings of its kind. The building can achieve these high levels of conservation due it its on-site grey and black water treatment.

The technology for this treatment, The Living Machine, reclaims and treats all of the building’s wastewater– meeting the demand for all of the buildings toilets. The Living Machine can treat 5,000 gallons of water daily, reducing per-person water use from 12 to five gallons. The building also has a rainwater harvesting system that can store up to 250,000 gallons of water annually for use in the building’s irrigation systems.

As far as power goes, the building uses a greenhouse gas-free  power from the Hetch Hetchy Reservoir, but also has an integrated hybrid solar array as well as a wind turbine that can generation about seven percent of the building’s annual energy needs.

The building was designed with a raised flooring system to house its data and ventilation infrastructure that also reduces heating, cooling and ventilation costs by over half. They also plan to do the more simple things, like automatically shut off workstation power after business hours, use more sustainable building materials, and limit parking to encourage alternative transportation among employees.

“The unique hybrid wind-solar installation combined with the use of onsite, recycled wastewater makes 525 Golden Gate one of the most self-sustaining buildings anywhere in the world,” said SFPUC General Manager Ed Harrington as part of the announcement. “We did not spare any detail to demonstrate the water-saving and energy efficiency revolution that all of us must start to embrace.”

However, the building cost the city a whopping $146.5 million– which brings back the argument between building new energy efficient buildings, or spending the money to make the ones we already have perform better. There isn’t a right answer, what’s probably best is for there to be a combination of the two– a new building should be built to high energy standards, but some time and resources should be taken to reboot the clunky power-wasters that remain in every city.

Employees are set to move in to their new space in July and August, and the building is set to be on track for its Platinum LEED ranking within a year of operation. The SFPUC estimates that building and owning its new headquarters will allow the department to save residents around $3.7 billion over the expected 100 year life of the building.

For more information, please visit: www.sfwater.org/HQ
Photo Credits: Exterior entrance: Living Machine Systems, L3C
Full building photo: San Francisco PUC

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Beth Carter

About Beth Carter

Beth Carter is a contributing editor for SmartPlanet.

Beth Carter

Beth Carter

Contributing Editor

Beth Carter is a freelance journalist based in New York City. She has worked for Catalyst magazine, the New York Times Syndicate, BBC Travel and Wired. She holds degrees from the University of Oregon and New York University.

Follow her on Twitter.

Beth Carter

Beth Carter

Beth does not have financial holdings that would influence how or what she covers in her writing.

She writes for SmartPlanet and is not an employee of CBS.

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Posted by brwills
26th Jun
0 Votes
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Structural innovation = resilience = high sustaibility
I'd just like to inject my two cents about Tipping Mar's contributions to project's sustainability features, which includes resilience--a very important factor in a project's longevity and service potential--and green concrete mixes, to dramatically lower GHG emissions. As the seismic consultant to SFPUC, Tipping Mar implemented our extremely cost-effective innovative post-tensioned lateral system that returns a building to plumb after a seismic event--this means no permanent deformations after a very large earthquake, the kind that render a building uninhabitable until it is repaired, often to the tune of millions of dollars. In addition, our design solution (1) added a thirteenth story to an originally 12-story building owing to lowered floor-to-ceiling heights (equating to higher density, not to mention greater usable real estate); (2) trimmed the construction schedule owing to our optimized link-beam design that, in conjunction with our PT lateral system, reduced steel reinforcement by 50 percent; (3) saved the project $10 million in direct costs; and (4) decreased the project's carbon footprint by 7.4 million pounds of carbon dioxide emissions, owing to Tipping Mar's work with Central Concrete to design six different low-concrete specs used throughout the building.

For in-depth information, read Engineering News Record's cover feature on Tipping Mar and SFPUC: http://enr.construction.com/buildings/sustainability/2012/0220-65279tensioning-eases-stress.asp
Posted by gtphelan
27th Jun
0 Votes
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That's great!
All new buildings must be prescribed to be done this way or better!

www.juneayasol.com
Posted by JuneAYasol
27th Jun
0 Votes
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Wind-solar "Sustainability"
I'm sorry but a "hybrid solar array as well as a wind turbine that can generation about seven percent of the building???s annual energy needs" does not constitute sustainable.
It may well be "one of the most self-sustaining buildings anywhere in the world" but only because these touted power generation sources are coupled with things like the raised flooring system that reduces HVAC costs by half. Cutting costs in half, now that is impactful. Please don't try to pass off 7% as significant. Not until solar cells are more efficient will solar power be close to a viable "alternative" energy source. And wind? Seriously? I am all for sustainable alternative energy sources but throwing billions of dollars and acres of land into windmills is not the answer.

Finally, limiting "parking to encourage alternative transportation among employees" doesn't encourage but coerces employees to search for another option. Force will never change someone's thinking. If they don't see the environmental benefit to one less car on the road they will either pay more for the available spots or begrudgingly find an alternative.

Don't get me wrong, this building as a whole really sounds great! I have worked in the AEC industry for nearly 20 years and have been looking forward to innovations like LEED and ISI (http://sustainableinfrastructure.org/). Now we just need to figure out how to bring down the cost so that LEED principles will be used in more construction.

Sorry for the rant. For the last few years I have been working with and learning more about energy. I get a little upset when someone praises one of the so-called alternative energy "solutions" that are still years away from putting a significant dent in our energy needs/consumption.
Posted by Kombi-photog
29th Jun
0 Votes
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Another record-breaking building example that is LEED Platinum Certified
The Rice Fergus Miller office building in Bremerton, Washington, is among only a handful of buildings ever to receive more than 90 LEED points. It has a remarkable energy efficiency level of 21Kbtu/SF, making it possible to reach Net Zero Energy with a large enough solar array on the roof (when they can afford to install it). The building had an extremely affordable construction cost of $105/SF and was a renovation of an historic old dilapidated building in the heart of Bremerton. This building is a model for deep energy savings in existing buildings without huge budget and without tearing down old historic buildings.

http://buildings.newbuildings.org/overview.cfm?projectID=2136
Posted by ajread
2nd Jul
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