November k), 20IÒ $3ortlanb Qftbstruer Page II Education&Careers Complete Makeover for PCC Sylvania Oldest campus to modernize learning environment by K ate C hester F or the P ortland O bserver Portland Community College’s oldest campus is about to get a facelift. At 42 years old, PCC’s Sylvania Campus is embarking on a five to seven-year construction project that will result in a modernized, en­ ergy-efficient campus. Initial design plans and concepts were shared Oct. 27 at a community forum. “Sylvania is known for its vin­ tage, concrete 1968 buildings that were constructed when energy prices were considerably lower,” said Linda Gerber, president of Sylvania Campus. “These are not energy efficient buildings, nor do they offer our students the best learning environment.” Funding for construction stems from a $374 million bond measure that voters ap­ proved in 2008 to upgrade exist­ ing buildings, ex p an d w o rk ­ force train in g facilities and add needed b u ild ­ ings at P C C ’s cam puses throughout the district. cessibility in case of emergencies; and improving storm water manage­ ment and way-finding on campus. “The complexity of this is really the coordination of logistics - of what project to begin, when, so that we create the least amount of dis­ ruption and can continue operating as usual, for students and staff,” said Jeff Triplett, Sylvania’s dean of instruction and campus liaison to the project. To achieve this, most construction work will be done dur­ ing the summer months when there are fewer students on campus. Simultaneous to the improve­ ments being rolled out at Sylvania is the campus’ goal of getting on the “path to Net Zero” - meaning, to create a campus that generates its own energy, collects its own water needs and treats its own waste. The project also is referred to as “E6” - for energy creation; energy conservation; environmental stew­ ardship; employment stimulus; edu­ cation; and effective and efficient use of funds. The idea was launched in 2009 when Gerding Edlen Sustainable So­ lutions was brought on to conduct . The architec­ tural design ef­ forts at Sylvania are being led by GBD Architects. A cco rd in g to P ro je ct M a n ­ a g er G ary S u tto n , about $55 million to $60 Concrete buildings that lack energy efficiency on million will be , the Sylvania campus of Portland Community pumpe into t e College will be refurbished with green features in campus toireno- a maj or m0Cj ernizati0n of the southwest Portland vate 160,000 cam pug square feet of classroom, laboratory and office a study and determine what it would sPace* take to make the campus Net Zero. “The largest project will be mod- A handful of multi-phase options emizing nearly 75 percent of the were developed and presented for College Center building, transform- consideration; the option chosen - ing it into an accessible, easy-to- which will be woven into the reno- n av ig ate student u n io n ,” said vations - includes building and Sutton. water efficiency measures, and en- Other projects include building a ergy creation by way of a mega-watt new childcare development center co-generator. Together, they are and a storage facility for the auto- anticipated to create an annual sav- motive building; completing a road ings estimated at $ 1.2 million, around the campus to enhance ac- “W e’re looking at the Net Zero/ IFl-wr '4 5* 1: ~ *<• Portland C om m unity I College Bond funded improvements will completely modernize Portland Community College’s Sylvania Campus in southwest Portland, the oldest campus in the college system. E6 project as a model for innovative strategies and practices to address climate change, environmental stew- ardship and green workforce devel- opment,” Gerber said. “To marry this with bond-funded improve- ments slated for Sylvania will offer incredible learning opportunities for our students - and the community at large benefits from this.” The campus is hosting visioning sessions and symposiums with fac­ ulty, staff and students to get input and suggestions about what works well, areas for improvement and op­ portunities for interactive sharing as it creates a design framework for the campus improvements. “We want to develop a sche­ matic that provides greater accessi­ bility, flexible and adaptable com­ mon spaces, introduces natural day­ light indoors and creates intuitive way-finding on campus,” said Kyle Andersen, one of the lead GBD ar­ chitects on the project. The Sylvania C am p u s- which straddles Portland, T igard and Lake Oswego - is P C C ’s largest campus, with 30,430 full-and part- time students. This represents an increase o f nearly 18 percent over the past decade. C ollectively, the college serves more than 90,000 students - m ore than every school in the Oregon U niversity System combined. Oregon Episcopal School OPEN HOUSE November 14, 2010 • Grades 9-12 •-1:30-4 pm OREGON E P IS C O P A L SCHOOL 6300 SW Nicol Road • Portland, Oregon 97223 503-768-3115 • admit@oes.edu www.oes.edu