Forum for Science, Industry and Business
Sponsored by:     Siemens  n-tv 
Search our Site:

Topic (optional):

 

Home Reports Architecture and Construction Content

New Course to Focus on Green Construction

next article
12.12.2008

Construction management Department at UALR offers a new course this spring teaching builders the techniques of building environmentally friendly new construction and retrofitting existing business to be more green.

 

Beginning in the spring, budding construction managers at UALR -- the University of Arkansas at Little Rock -- and around the world can learn building strategies and techniques to make their structures more environmentally friendly – just in time for a green revolution consumers are waging and the incoming Obama administration is encouraging.


James K. Carr, associate professor of construction management in UALR’s Donaghey College of Engineering and Information Technology, said the senior-level course will be offered online.

“The course will be based on LEED standards, but not necessarily teach the LEED test. The course will incorporate those things” Carr said, referring to the Leadership in Energy and Environment Design certification program.

“Students will pick existing buildings and study how the structure is meeting those standards and study how that particular building can be made more sustainable, more green.”

One topic will be how builders and designers can harvest naturally occurring resources for long-term savings for building owners. Students will examine active and passive solar systems to harvest sunlight or collecting rainwater to flush toilets or water gardens.

“There are extremes you can go to; we’re not going to emphasize that, but we will talk about it,” he said.

How green can a building get?

“It can get extreme,” Carr said. “There are some systems where you can take even the water that comes out of the toilet and use it as drinking water. That’s what I call an extreme. It’s doable, but you have to change your attitude when you get into something like that.”

Carr said green systems and products sometimes can add to the cost of construction or renovation, but he said consumers are increasingly going green – even if costs are higher at the outset – because they know they will save utility costs in the long run. And reducing one’s carbon footprint is becoming more and more popular.

He suspects the new course will be popular. Last spring, the National Association of Homebuilders began offering a short course on green building, and it became one of the most popular courses the association has ever offered.

Carr said a professional enrolling in his new course won’t receive any special certification, but the knowledge students will acquire will assist in acquiring LEED certification.

Carr’s college is practicing what he preaches. UALR’s new engineering and information technology building currently under construction on the northwest area of the campus will incorporate numerous techniques and systems the construction management students will learn in Carr’s class.

The construction industry is the nation's largest industry, employing more than 10 percent of the nation’s workforce. Construction management graduates from UALR are equipped to meet the technical challenges of the 21st century and the highly specialized demands of the modern construction industry.

For more information about UALR’s new green construction class, contact Carr at jkcarr@ualr.edu or visit UALR’s website for enrollment information at www.ualr.edu.

Carr | Source: Newswise Science News
Further information: www.ualr.edu

next article

More articles from Architecture and Construction:

nachricht NIST Launches New Competition for Research Facility Construction Grants
04.03.2010 | National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST)

nachricht City as Ecosystem: New Models for Sustainable Cities and Landscapes
23.02.2010 | University of Arkansas, Fayetteville

B2B Search

Product / Service
Company / Organisation

Latest News

Amniotic fluid cells more efficiently reprogrammed to pluripotency than adult cells

16.03.2010 | Life Sciences

New research shows babies are born to dance

16.03.2010 | Studies and Analyses

Earthquake observatory in Northern Chile to monitor the last seismic gap

16.03.2010 | Earth Sciences

VideoLinks
More VideoLinks >>>

Event News

Facing the Multicore-Challenge

10.03.2010 | Event News

Cracks in the Concrete Jungle: New Perspectives on Urban Ecology

09.03.2010 | Event News

Berlin Conference 2010: Call for Paper

01.03.2010 | Event News