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S.J. Quinney College of Law

University of Utah S.J. Quinney College of Law Awarded LEED Platinum Designation for Green Design

Posted on September 27, 2016August 12, 2020 by Jonelle White

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The U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC), has awarded the College of Law’s new building, which marked its first anniversary in August 2016, the prestigious LEED platinum designation.

“LEED” stands for Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design. The USGBC awards this designation to buildings that meet standards of being green and efficient in their design.  LEED-certified spaces use less energy and water; save money for taxpayers, businesses and other building owners; reduce carbon emissions; create jobs; and establish a healthier environment for residents, workers, and the larger community. The University of Utah’s law school is the first in the western United States designed to earn such a designation and is believed to be only the second law school in the country to achieve that status.

The law school’s LEED designation adds to an already impressive list of LEED-certified facilities in Utah, a state that earlier this year ranked among the top 10 U.S. states for LEED-certified buildings per capita. The law school joins 40 other facilities in Utah certified to LEED platinum status. The law school, however, is the highest achieving LEED platinum higher education project in the state, based on the number of points award.

“We are delighted to observe the one-year anniversary in our newly-designated LEED platinum law school. Beyond setting an example of sustainable building for our community and serving as a gateway to our greater University of Utah campus, we are proud of all we’ve accomplished inside these walls so far,” said S.J. Quinney College of Law Dean Robert Adler. “From clinical programs to experiential learning opportunities to collaborative research initiatives, we have matched the innovation we modeled in our building with innovation in legal education, which allows us to set the bar high for a continued path of student success.”

The law school built its LEED platinum building with assistance from the Alternative Visions Fund of the Chicago Community Trust, which provided $4.5 million in support of the sustainability features. Many of the law school’s sustainability features serve as examples for other building projects on the campus of the University of Utah, the Salt Lake community, and the nation, and some are models of innovation. For example, windows in the building have ultraviolet spider web designs that are visible to birds but not humans, greatly reducing bird collisions.

Notable features that contributed to the building’s LEED platinum status include:

  • A building designed with the goal of achieving 65 percent reduction in energy costs beyond code requirements through smart structural design and passive solar lighting and heating.
  • Investments in onsite solar power generation and maximum use of natural light.
  • Chilled beam cooling and heating systems and highly efficient fixtures.
  • Recycling and re-using grey water to flush toilets.

The building also incorporates passive energy strategies that reduce overall energy consumption through:

  • Enhanced exterior insulation to reduce thermal conductivity.
  • Fixed exterior sunshades to minimize solar heat gain during the summer.
  • Exterior overhangs that also act as sunshades to reduce the building heat gain in the summer.
  • Low emissivity, insulating glass to reduce thermal transmittance and glare while improving visible light transmittance.

In addition, the building achieves energy savings through the integration of more efficient energy-using systems, including:

  • The chilled beam HVAC system to heat and cool the building, with radiant floor heating and cooling to supplement the chilled beam system.
  • A heat recovery system to transfer the heat from the exhausted conditioned air into the fresh ventilation air.
  • Regenerative elevators to convert the excess energy generated by an elevator into electricity that can be used elsewhere in the building.
  • An enhanced lighting control system that includes occupancy sensors and daylight sensors.

A complete list of the building features used to evaluate its LEED platinum status is available by clicking here.

Evaluators examine a checklist of items and award points to a building for its various sustainable features. The law school received a score of 87 points from LEED evaluators. At least 80 points are necessary for LEED platinum certification.

Prior to the LEED platinum designation, the building garnered other awards for its innovative features. Lead architect Sean Thompson of the VCBO/Smith Group architecture firm received a “community justice award” from the Disability Law Center for the building’s universal accessibility design. Energy engineer Steve Connor of Coleman Engineering was a finalist for the governor’s energy innovation award for designing the building’s unique use of groundwater from a campus well to help air condition the facility. The building itself received the Most Outstanding Green/Sustainable Building Award for 2015 from Utah Construction and Design and the 2016 Alta Sustainability Leadership Award for Sustainable Campus Transformation, as well as recognitions from the Virginia and Maryland chapters of the American Institute of Architects (AIA). And Big-D Construction Corporation earned the 2015 Green Building Champion of the Year Award from the Associated Builders and Contractors, Inc.

Amy Wildermuth, the University of Utah’s chief sustainability officer, noted that the College of Law’s new building “is truly an impressive accomplishment. We expect LEED silver certification for all new buildings on campus given the University requirements for energy efficiency, water conservation, occupant health and safety, and sustainable materials. Fewer than 5 percent of LEED projects undertaken anywhere, however, achieve Platinum status. Why? Because it is not enough to have a great architect, which we were also fortunate to have in VCBO/Smith Group.”

“In order to attain this level of success, the S.J. Quinney College of Law had to be fully engaged in the building process from pre-planning to completion. We are very grateful to the faculty, staff, students, administration—and particularly Dean Bob Adler—for their efforts to accomplish this amazing level of performance and for serving as a model,” Wildermuth continued.

Besides its environmental merits, the new building has aided the college’s already substantial commitment to community service and community-engaged learning. University of Utah law students provided more than 40,000 hours of pro bono and clinical service to underserved clients last year.

The $62.5 million building provides accessibility for people with a full range of disabilities. Located at the southwest corner of campus across from the Stadium TRAX station, the building established a welcoming gateway for visitors to campus when it opened last year.

“Alumni, students, and the community are thrilled that our beautiful new building earned LEED platinum status. We are proud of the sustainability efforts put into its LEED design,” said Michele Ballantyne, president of the S.J. Quinney College of Law Alumni Board of Trustees. “The building has provided, and will continue to provide, an atmosphere where students can thrive and the college’s programs can continue to advance nationally.”

The building has received ongoing generous support from the S.J. and Jessie E. Quinney Foundation, the University of Utah, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, the Alternative Visions Fund of the Chicago Community Trust, as well as a number of law firms and individual donors. Big-D Construction completed work on the 155,000-square-foot building.

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Stegner Newsletter - Fall 2016

Director’s Message

  • Director’s Letter

News of Note

  • University of Utah’s Environmental & Natural Resources Law Program is Top Ten--Again
  • ESRR Endowment Fund for Wallace Stegner Center Increased to $5 million
  • The Naming of the Robert B. Keiter Conference Room
  • College of Law Building Awarded LEED Platinum Certification

Stegner Center Events

  • Stegner Center’s 22nd Annual Symposium: “Water in the West: Exploring Untapped Solutions”
  • Professor Sanne Knudsen Joins Stegner Center as 12th Annual Young Scholar
  • Stegner Center 2016-2017 Events
  • Stegner Center 2015 to 2016 Year in Review

Faculty News

  • Faculty Updates
  • Professor Craig appointed to IUCN World Commission on Environmental Law
  • Water law Down Under: Professor Craig Teaches at University of Tasmania School of Law
  • New Research by Law School’s EDR Program Associate Director Rumore is Altering the Game of Climate Change

Program Update

  • Environmental Dispute Resolution Program Update
  • Research Fellows Program Update
  • Alternatives to a Federal Land Takeover Explored in New Research from Stegner Center
  • Environmental Law Clinic Update

Student News

  • Stegner Center Student Scholarship Recipients and Writing Awards
  • Stegner Center Students Awarded Array of Scholarships
  • Behle Fellows Program
  • Stegner Center Student Team Competes in Pace University Jeffrey G. Miller National Environmental Law Moot Court Competition
  • Stegner Center Student Teams Compete in West Virginia University College of Law National Energy & Sustainability Moot Court Competition

Donors

  • Stegner Center Donors 2015 to 2016 Fiscal Year
  • Green Building Fund Donors
  • The S. J. and Jessie E. Quinney Legacy
  • Appeal for Donations
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