Best Green Schools Honored

The U.S. Green Building Council’s Center for Green Schools,  announced awards for the Best Green Schools, ranging from K-12 to higher education.

They are recognized for a variety of sustainable, cost-cutting measures, including energy conservation, record numbers of LEED- certified buildings and collaborative platforms and policies to green U.S. school infrastructure.

Green schools save an average $100,000 a year on operating costs – enough to hire two new teachers, buy 200 new computers, or purchase 5,000 textbooks. They average 33% less energy consumption and use 32% less water than conventionally constructed schools.

If all new renovation and new building construction for schools used green building practices, the total energy savings alone would be $20 billion over the next 10 years.

Recipients include:

Moment for the MovementU.S. Department of Education, Green Ribbon Schools: Green Ribbon Schools is the first comprehensive and coordinated federal initiative to focus on the intersection of environment, health and education.

RegionSacramento area: Mayor Kevin Johnson has led the charge to bring together mayors and superintendents from across the Northern California region to create a $100 million revolving loan fund for green school retrofits.

StateOhio: With 315 LEED registered and certified projects, including 19 schools registered in 2011, Ohio leads the nation with more green school projects underway than any other state.

CityPhiladelphia: The School District of Philadelphia made significant steps in 2011 toward the greening of the city’s 291 public schools.

SchoolLake Mills Middle School (Lake Mills, WI): In March 2011, Lake Mills Middle School became the first public school in the nation to achieve LEED Platinum certification.

Higher Ed InnovatorUniversity of Texas at Dallas: The University’s new LEED Platinum Student Services Building, which was the recipient of this year’s Innovation in Green Building Award, was designed to improve departmental efficiency and interaction, includes terra-cotta shades on the building’s exterior to provide a unique energy efficient shading strategy and was built $1.1 million under budget.

CollaboratorsKentucky Reps. Jim DeCesare (R) and Mary Lou Marzian (D): This bipartisan team has led Kentucky’s green school efforts and is a model for teaming on green school collaboration. Together, they’ve worked with their colleagues in the Kentucky General Assembly to unanimously adopt resolutions in support of green schools, and have encouraged other states to work across party lines on similar efforts.

ConvenerBoston: In September 2011, Mayor Menino hosted the Research Summit on Childhood Health and School Buildings, which brought together a team of interdisciplinary researchers to explore the connection between school facilities and student health. Boston’s public school district is also home to one of the first Center for Green Schools Fellows – a sustainability coordinator who will work within the school district for three years, bringing together faculty, administration, facilities staff, teachers and students to advance whole-district sustainability initiatives.

Policy makersDistrict of Columbia City Council: In May 2010, the Washington, D.C. council unanimously passed the Healthy Schools Act of 2010, building upon the District’s existing LEED Silver requirement and encouraging schools to achieve LEED Gold certification. 2011 updates to the bill included participation in the U.S. Department of Education’s Green Ribbon Schools program, making D.C. the first – before any state – to sign up for the voluntary federal program.

K-12 InnovationPublic-Private partnership in Illinois: A report outlining a plan to green all K-12 schools in Illinois was released in March 2011 as a result of a public-private partnership commissioned by the Illinois’ General Assembly’s October 2009 adoption of House Joint Resolution 45.

Learn more about the winners: 

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