ADVERTISEMENT
You will be redirected to your destination in 15 seconds.
Subscribe to Interior Design
Comment
RSS
Reprints/License
Print
Email

Share this on
Facebook
LinkedIn
Twitter

Project Spotlight: Heifer International Education Center, Little Rock, Arkansas

Sara Pepitone -- Interior Design, 6/1/2012 7:24:00 PM

Heifer_Center
View Slideshow

 Little Rock, AR
Completed: stage 1: June 2009; stage 2: October 2011
Architect: Polk Stanley Wilcox
SF: 19,930
Cost: $7.3-million
Everything that Heifer International does has sustainability in mind, so it’s fitting this non-profit’s new International Education Center would be designed and built with this in mind. 

To this end, Heifer hired Polk Stanley Wilcox to help determine a strategy that made financial sense, but also adhered to its sustainable goals. “We are committed to finding solutions that make both environmental and economic sense within the life cycle of the project,” says Reese Rowland, principal of the Little Rock, AR-based firm, designer of the state’s first LEED Platinum and LEED Gold buildings. “We found beauty in strategies that are environmentally sound.”
The 20-acre site, formerly an environmentally contaminated brownfield, includes Heifer’s $18-million headquarters, a national AIA top ten green building designed by Polk Stanley Wilcox more than a decade ago when sustainability was a relatively new concept. Today a new ecosystem flourishes, while wetlands irrigate the site with no reliance on external sources. Spillways carved into concrete walls deliver roof rainwater to be stored in the wetland. The water is then reused to feed vegetation specifically chosen to scrub the water, eliminating pollutants naturally.

Collected water from other buildings is stored in a tank for use in the mechanical system and for flushing toilets.  The water bill for the combined 115,000-square foot headquarters and Education Center, which includes exhibit galleries, meeting spaces, a gift shop and a café, has been as low as $400. Without the café, the number would fall to about $150. “That has been probably the most successful aspect of the building,” says Rowland. Imagine what will result from the recent solar installation. 

RELATED ARTICLES
Project Spotlight: Engine House No. 5, Denver, CO.
Project Spotlight: City of Tucson Police Department Forensic Crime Laboratory, Tucson, AZ
Project Spotlight: NASA Sustainability Base, Moffett Field, California
Project Spotlight: Headquarters of the Iowa Utilities Board and Office of Consumer Advocate (IUB-OCA)
Comment
RSS
Reprints/License
Print
Email

Share this on
Facebook
LinkedIn
Twitter

Talkback
Advertisement
More Content
  • Photos

Best in Market: Furniture and Lighting

These top picks in furniture and lighting proved their staying power from last fall's High Point Market. Here, our favorites in furniture and lighting from the North Carolina show.

A Minimalist Update Works with Color

From the magazine: Meeting in the Middle

The husband-and-wife team of Katarzyna and Tomasz Widawscy favor minimalist, white interiors. But their clients, a married couple with two young children, asked that bright color figure prominently in the 970-square-foot Warsaw apartment Widawscy Studio Architektury was designing for them. Photography by Lukasz Kozyra.
+back to article

Under Paris Rooftops

Laurent Vassilian, a French 30-something TV writer, knew exactly what he wanted. After a multiyear search, he’d finally found the right apartment on a particular Paris street: a 750-square-foot fixer-upper under the slanting mansard roof of a 17th-century building. Photography by Eric Laignel. +view resources
+back to article
VIEW ALL GALLERIES