Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
The Sonicare Office and Manufacturing Facility In the Snoqualmie Ridge Business Park Sustainable Building Advisor Certificate Program, 2002 Project Team: Dale Anderson Susan Drucy Brad Liljequist Katrina Morgan The Sonicare Office and Manufacturing Facility The Sonicare Office and Manufacturing Facility The Sonicare Office and Manufacturing Facility • Research/ Development Fabrication under one roof--creator of Sonicare electric toothbrushes • Located in Snoqualmie Ridge Master Planned Community, in the Cascade Foothills • This is a 176,000 square foot tilt-up concrete building • 11 Acre site • East and West Wings--East is corporate offices, west is fabrication/ shipping and additional offices The Sonicare Office and Manufacturing Facility Client Context • Facility built in 1999 to consolidate dispersed operations • Building built and initially owned by Quadrant Commercial Properties. Building initially leased by Sonicare • In 2001, Phillips purchased Sonicare as well as the building Physical Context • Building located in larger Snoqualmie Ridge Master Planned Community • At completion, Snoqualmie Ridge will include: – 2,000 homes – 2 million square feet of office space – 100,000 square feet of retail space • Facility is about 1,000 feet from the future neighborhood retail area and 2,000 feet from half the Ridge residents • Downtown Snoqualmie is a 10 minute drive Overview Map Our Approach: We will discuss a few representative points about each category in terms of these three questions: • What does the building do well? • What retrofit could improve the performance? • What are the missed opportunities? Site/ Transportation What’s Good? • • • • Close to housing and services. . . Walkability Showers provided within building Bike Parking Jobs/ Housing Balance Possible retrofits: • Incentive programs for employees to carpool • Provide public transportation, carpooling, flexcar etc. Missed Opportunities: • Snoqualmie Ridge is not an urban village. . . more of a self-contained, isolated community • There is no transit service • Lack of affordable housing for assembly room workers. . . raises equity issues Water Issues What’s good? • Stormwater detained and treated to DOE Central Puget Sound requirements • 1992 water efficient fixtures provided • Mostly native landscaping (drought tolerant) Possible retrofits: • Update fixtures: – Waterless urinals – Kitchen, bathroom faucet and shower gpm’s limited • Do more detailed analysis of cafeteria water usage. Pre-rinse system and more efficient washers. • Install rainwater catchment system for irrigation, replace standard landscaping with drip system Missed Opportunities • Use of rainwater for non-potable interior needs • Grasspave for overflow parking • Use of parking lot landscaping for supplemental water quality treatment • Green roof Construction Materials What’s good? • A simple, open building plan reduces the overall use of material, and increases the flexibility of the space • Tilt-up concrete produces little waste • A combination of carpet tile, broadloom, and concrete floors. Carpet companies today work hard to make their products recycled and recyclable. • There is no acoustical tile in the building • Resources on the site were maximized Possible retrofits: • Systems furniture could be reduced by sending back portions to the manufacturer to be re-used or re-cycled • Develop a vigorous company-wide reduce/ recycle program focused on reducing the consumption of and waste produced by this building. This has obvious cost benefits Missed Opportunities: • The company could have been re-located to an existing building, making use of resources already in the market • Higher fly-ash content concrete • More recycled materials could have been used Indoor Environmental Quality What’s Good? • The lobby space has excellent air quality, due to hard surfaces, good ventilation, and low particulates • Most office employees have access to daylight • The spaces are very clean • Ventilation allows some occupant control Possible retrofits: • Isolate copy/ print areas and provide supplemental ventilation to these areas • The furniture could be reconfigured to allow better light penetration and reduce the tunnel effect of the offices • Operable windows or trickle vents could be placed in strategic locations to allow more occupant control • Skylights or light wells in the manufacturing space to allow access to natural light • Enact a sustainable, non-toxic maintenance methodology Missed Opportunities: • This would have been a good candidate for a raised floor system • Systems furniture design could have been more carefully chosen to maximize light and material • Solar orientation, natural ventilation, and nontoxic flooring materials. . . • Build the building based on the site-- allow views and outdoor break spaces Energy/ Lighting What’s good? • It’s good that Phillips, a company that describes itself as a “global leader in. . . Lighting…” (www.phillips.com), now owns the company and the building. There may be a possibility of more energy efficient lighting upgrades in the future, to supplement some that have already happened. • In the office wing, many workspaces are situated along the periphery, allowing ample daylight. Possible retrofits Office Wing: • A dropped, acoustical ceiling should be installed to reflect light back downwards that is lost upwards into the unfinished ceiling • All T-12 ballasts should be replaced with newer technology, electronic ballast T-8s, especially since T-8 tubes are currently in those ballasts, resulting in flicker and energy inefficiencies • To help improve the overall lighting levels of the office areas, many of the walls should be re-painted from their current dark blue color to a lighter shade for benefits of wall reflectance Possible retrofits Production Wing: • Skylights could be a feasible retrofit in this area, though a pricey one • Task lighting should be upgraded in this area where visually precise work takes place. Currently, there are old T-12 lamps at the workbench stations that provide a low quality of light Missed Opportunities: • Light shelves could have been included I the design for the office wing to direct daylight deeper into the office • Skylights, again, as a missed opportunity in that they weren’t designed into the structure Energy/ HVAC What’s good? • Used Natural Gas Heating/ Cooling- most efficient fuel source available • Included Localized Control and Economizer cycleoccupants can adjust their local temperatures • Designed with energy efficiency considered- meets Building Code for thermal performance (I.e. insulation, window glazing, etc.), sited w/ East-West orientation Possible retrofits: • Install dropped ceilings-- integrated with lighting savings, reduces heating/ cooling loads • Extend economizer cycle to introduce night-time cooling- concrete surfaces can hold the cooler air during daytime occupied hours • Improve the Operation & Maintenance of systemsreduce call-backs of Mechanical Contractor Missed Opportunities • Improve Building Thermal performance- go beyond Code requirements, design to Occupant use and layout • Consider natural elements- ventilation, passive solar heating, daylighting (w/ high-performance glazing) • Provide conditioned air at the Occupant level- design distribution at floor level, not 12’-15’ high. In Conclusion • Developer based design is often not geared toward sustainability • Common sense design concepts can be more sustainable than complex solutions • Lessons can be learned from every project Site/ Transportation Water Issues Construction Materials Indoor Environmental Quality Energy/ HVAC Energy/ HVAC The Sonicare Office and Manufacturing Facility. . . Ride the wave