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Green project wins on its own terms [Colorado Court - Santa
Monica]
Going natural saves money and resources in a rental complex.
source: Kathy
Price-Robinson LATIMES 2003.8.3
E.J. Spalding didn't expect quality housing when she applied for
an apartment at Colorado Court, a housing complex in Santa Monica.
But the 80-year-old, who rented in Brentwood before her late husband's
nursing home bills ate up their nest egg, has been pleasantly surprised
by her $337-a-month rental.
"I never thought I would get anything so lovely," Spalding
said of her 370-square-foot studio apartment with its high ceiling,
efficiency kitchen and ocean view.
Colorado Court, consisting of three five-story buildings developed
by the nonprofit Community Corporation of Santa Monica, was built
as a demonstration project to test the installation and performance
of green technologies and systems in a real-world setting. It is
one of the first relatively inexpensive rental properties in the
country to generate more than enough electricity for its own uses.

The project so successfully fused design and green features
energy efficiency and use of recycled and natural resources
that it was voted one of the Top
10 Green Projects of 2003 by the American Institute of Architects.
Spalding rarely hears her neighbors next door, seldom needs a heater
and doesn't have air conditioning. Because of the way the structures
are situated on the lot, prevailing breezes flow through the 44
studio apartments, creating natural ventilation. The indoor air
quality is better than in other buildings because the materials
and paint have fewer toxins than those used in conventional construction,
according to the corporation. "I breathe easier here,"
Spalding said. "I feel healthier here."
The Santa Monica project is on the cusp of a trend to design green
homes for low- or moderate-income residents to help lower monthly
utility bills, which are the second-highest housing expense after
rent or mortgage payments. The electricity savings alone at Colorado
Court, where rent includes utilities, is estimated at $10,000 a
year.
In other green developments, the savings to residents can be significant.
Village Green, a 116-home project that opened in Sylmar a few years
ago, included solar panels on each house. According to statistics
from Fannie Mae, utility bills for these homes average $20 a month,
one-tenth of the $200 a month for comparable conventional homes.
Casa Verde, a development in Hollywood, was designed to have good
natural light, air circulation and maximum energy efficiency. And
recently the California Energy Commission has begun offering to
pay 75% of the installed cost of solar power systems used in new
low-cost housing projects.
Colorado Court is at Colorado Avenue and 5th Street, a few blocks
from the ocean and just north of the Santa Monica Freeway. Its three
towers glisten with facades composed of deep-blue photovoltaic panels
that look more ornamental than functional.
"A lot of people don't know they're solar panels," said
project architect Angela Brooks of Pugh Scarpa Kodama in Santa Monica.
The electricity generated by the panels provides power to the apartments.
The community corporation earns energy credits for any excess electricity
that is sent to the city's electric grid. During peak-use times
morning and evenings a gas-powered turbine on the
roof generates more electricity.
The AIA jury wrote that the solar panels integrated into Colorado
Court's architecture demonstrate "extraordinary design sophistication,
especially for an affordable housing project."
Hundreds of people, including university students, architects,
builders and developers, have toured the property since its opening
in spring 2002. So many people have wanted to see the development
that tours are now limited to one Sunday a month.
The attention hasn't bothered resident Richard Garcia, 37, a recovering
alcoholic who lived in a group home before moving to Colorado Court
a few months ago. He feels lucky to have the apartment. "The
location is to die for," he said.
There's an elegance about Garcia's apartment, partly from the natural
linoleum kitchen and bathroom floors, the formaldehyde-free solid
cabinets, the quietness from blown-in wall insulation made of recycled
newsprint, the quiet and energy-efficient refrigerator, and high-efficiency
windows that repel summer heat.
Cooling ocean breezes flow through each apartment by way of the
transom windows above the front doors. There are recycling stations
on each floor and motion-sensitive exterior corridor lights.
"This cutting-edge building gives a lift to the residents
who live there," said Joan Ling, executive director of the
community corporation. "It is good for business and good for
morale."
At the beginning stages of the project, the corporation had a budget
of $4 million for a pretty much conventional development. Then the
city of Santa Monica requested that Colorado Court be a green building,
and planning shifted midstream. An additional $400,000 was raised
through grants and rebates for solar panels, the gas turbine
and a drainage system that flows storm water into an aquifer
to finance the various sustainable products and systems that were
included.
While the solar panels attract attention, the positioning of the
buildings had more of an effect on making it a green project. Before
Pugh Scarpa Kodama became involved, a preliminary design had already
been approved by the Santa Monica City Council that did not take
advantage of the natural conditions of the site and would have required
air conditioners to cool the buildings.
"It was oriented all wrong," said Lawrence Scarpa, a
principal in the architecture firm. Orientation is the single most
important factor in creating a comfortable and energy-efficient
building, he said. "And it's free."
The current configuration shields the buildings from the direct
heat of the sun. Walkways on the south sides, which receive the
most sun, provide shade. The east and west sides have a minimum
number of windows to reduce exposure to morning and afternoon direct
sunlight. The north sides, which receive the least amount of direct
sun, have lots of windows.
To take advantage of airflow, the three buildings resemble three
fingers reaching toward the bay to catch prevailing winds. The solar
panels are on the west and atop the buildings.
There were some construction challenges. One delay came when the
solar panels that conceal the outdoor stairwells were approved during
the plan-check process but later challenged by the final inspectors.
Ultimately, a safety barrier had to be installed anywhere a person
might reach out and touch the panels.
Moreover, some subcontractors were unwilling to work with unusual
materials. According to Brooks, two insulation subcontractors said
they do not work with blown-in insulation, and another stated he
wouldn't work at all in Santa Monica, which is known for its stringent
building standards.
Now the architects have submitted documentation to the U.S. Green
Building Council to qualify the project for a gold rating by the
Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) system, the
council's voluntary rating program. The rating indicates a high
level of resource and energy efficiency and healthfulness for tenants.
The Community Corporation, which owns and manages 1,200 rentals,
will use solar panels and incorporate other green features on other
affordable projects 44 units at Pacific Street and Main Street,
41 units at 26th Street and Santa Monica Boulevard, and 44 units
at 15th Street and Broadway.
"We are applying our newfound knowledge to include cost-effective
green measures in every one," Ling said. "There is no
going back."
*
`Green' cannot always be seen. Although Colorado Court is sheathed
in solar panels, many green building techniques are not readily
apparent. Among those used at the complex:
The buildings are oriented on the site to maximize sunlight
and use prevailing breezes.
High-efficiency windows repel heat.
Transom windows above front doors increase air circulation.
Blown-in wall insulation is made of recycled newsprint.
Cabinets are made of formaldehyde-free solids.
Corridor lights are motion-sensitive.
Refrigerators are energy-efficient.
Permeable gravel alley and underground storm water retention
system retain 95% of site's storm water.
Each floor has a recycling center.
Plantings are drought-tolerant.
Carpeting is made of recycled products.
Bicycle racks and storage are provided to promote alternative
transportation.
And the green medal goes to ...
For its 2003 awards, the American Institute of Architects and its
Committee on the Environment selected 10 examples of architectural
and "green" design solutions that protect and enhance
the environment.
In addition to Santa Monica's Colorado Court, winners included
the Argonne Child Development Center in San Francisco, the Chicago
Center for Green Technology, Cusano Environmental Education Center
in Philadelphia, Fisher Pavilion in Seattle, Herman Miller Marketplace
in Grand Rapids, Mich., Hidden Villa Hostel & Summer Camp in
Los Altos Hills, the San Mateo County Sheriff's Forensic Laboratory
and Coroner's Office in San Mateo, the Steinhude Sea Recreation
Facility in Germany and Wine Creek Road residence in Northern California.
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