A River Runs Through It

Living Building in Massachusetts features fine art on the floor.

By Darcy Boyle, Communications Manager PROSOCO

Sept. 15, 2016

Concrete artists from EnnisArt have taken a standard concrete floor of the recently built Hitchcock Center for the Environment in Amherst, Mass., and turned it into a beautiful depiction of the region’s Connecticut River Watershed.

The artistic rendering will do more than greet 8,000+ visitors to the 9,000-square-foot education center every year with its physical beauty; it will also serve to educate and demonstrate responsible water use.

It will give visitors “a macro view of their place in the watershed while learning how the Center’s new building acts like a watershed in the design of its net-zero water system,” according to the Hitchcock Center.

Kelly Haigh, an architect at designLAB, said the region’s watershed directed the way the project’s designers thought about how to make the entire center a teaching tool.

“One of the really important aspects of Hitchcock’s pedagogy is the focus on systems thinking and looking at natural systems for indicators or direction on how we, as humans, can interface within the natural system,” she said. “So we used that direction and really looked at the principles of a watershed, in particular the Connecticut River Valley, as a way to form the building and demonstrate some natural properties.”

The decorative concrete floor can be found in the building’s “ecotone,” where the center’s net-zero water collection and processing system is on full display through its flush tanks. “It’s important that you can see all aspects of the filtration process,” Haigh said. “Water comes to this space. The first level of filtration and the removal of impurities happens here. It’s all very exposed and part of the narrative of the building.”

The teaching aspect of the ecotone, paired with the decorative map on the floor, helps check off two criteria (beauty and education) of the Living Building Challenge, arguably the world’s most rigorous green building certification that the Hitchcock Center aims to attain within one year of occupancy and energy and performance verification.

According to Julie Johnson, executive director of the Hitchcock Center, the organization wanted the plans for the new center to amplify its mission of creating greater understanding and awareness of the environment, generating an emotional bond and connection to the natural world and developing a heightened awareness of the importance of healthy soil, air and water.

“We learned about the Living Building Challenge… and became instantly excited about the approach and the framework and the philosophies of it and how deeply they thought about sustainability and its performance standards: Net-zero energy, net-zero water,” Johnson said.

“We instantly decided, ‘That’s going to be it, we’re going to be the first environmental education center in New England to achieve the Living Building Challenge.’”

Of the Living Building Challenge’s seven petals, or categories of required goals for certification, the beauty petal is the one left intentionally open-ended.

“In this petal, the imperatives are based on genuine efforts, thoughtfully applied,” according to the Living Building Challenge website. “We do not begin to assume we can judge beauty and project our own aesthetic values on others. But we do want to understand people’s objectives and know that an effort was made to enrich people’s lives with each square meter of construction, on each project.”

Getting down to the floor

For some, an open-ended mission like this one might seem daunting.

But it was just the project for the artisanal concrete specialists at EnnisArt of Asheville, N.C. CEO Tom Schulz said he was pointed in the direction of PROSOCO’s Consolideck decorative colors and stains due to their compliance with the Living Building Challenge Red List – a list of chemicals of concern that cannot be used on a Living Building.

Because Consolideck ColorHard colors (as well as LS/CS, a densifier and hardener, and PolishGuard, a protective sealer) have been verified to contain no ingredients on the Red List, they’re pre-vetted for this and other Living Building projects.

Schulz, along with EnnisArt design associate Daniel de Wit, spent considerable time in their studio perfecting their plan, with help from Paul Smallwood, technical specialist for PROSOCO’s concrete flooring group. Watch EnnisArt’s 30-second video documenting their color experiments >>

“I worked for two weeks prior to leaving for the project learning how the colors worked, especially in a variety of dilutions,” Schulz said. “Every ration and mix was catalogued.”

But once Schulz and de Wit arrived with their gear in Amherst, they realized that scaling the map wouldn’t mean an exact replication of their testing.

“Upon arrival on site, we created a color key – determining how the colors operated on the specific concrete, so I thought we were good to go on the map itself,” Schulz said. “Once the drawing was transcribed to full size, it became apparent that color and color relationships required new and ‘in the moment’ approaches…. After all the calculations and all the tests, I was able to make all the decisions that I generally make while creating a painting. It wasn’t staining concrete – it was making a painting.”

In addition to the colors making up that tableau, the team also used LS/CS and PolishGuard to densify and protect the concrete floor, respectively.

De Wit noticed multiple benefits to these products over alternatives, including time savings.

“The quick turn-around time of PROSOCO materials made it not only faster for us, but allowed us to be better members of the whole construction team,” he said. “We could block off a room, apply the LS/CS and PolishGuard in a day, and let the crew back in the next morning.”

The Consolideck products contrasted significantly with the acid stains they often use, a process involving neutralizing and cleaning, which de Wit says “adds a lot of extra time to the workflow.”

“The two-person system for applying PolishGuard is fast and effective. We were able to quickly achieve a beautiful polished floor without generating any dust.”

Watch a time-lapse video of the map installation >>

The great unveiling

On Oct. 1, the Hitchcock Center will open its doors officially to the public with a grand opening event. De Wit will be in attendance to see the artwork in its completed state, a successful manifestation of beauty and education combined.

“I like to make a public art that provides a multitude of educational opportunities for each individual,” Schulz said. “Maps are perfectly attuned to that appreciation – ‘You are here.’ This installation is a great example of how beauty and education become symbiotic components of the art and the very building itself.”

Original article here.

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