Other Tangents

The Bertschi School Field Trip

Last week we were fortunate to be invited to tour Capitol Hill’s Bertschi School, specifically the Living Science Wing of the Bertschi School. What an amazing experience this was!

June 26, 2014

Last week we were fortunate to be invited to tour Capitol Hill’s Bertschi School, specifically the Living Science Wing of the Bertschi School. What an amazing experience this was! We were able to see firsthand the beauty and innovation of the Cascadia Region Green Building Council’s Living Building Challenge. According to the International Living Building Institute, the Living Building Challenge “defines the most advanced measure of sustainability in the built environment possible today and acts to diminish the gap between current limits and ideal solutions. This certification program covers all buildings at all scales and is a unified tool for transformative design, allowing us to envision a future that is Socially Just, Culturally Rich, and Ecologically Benign.”

Fotor

It’s truly remarkable what this school has done to enrich the lives of its students, the community, and the world at large. Stacy Smedley, one of the KMD Architects that initially organized the Restorative Design Collective that built and designed The Living Science Classroom pro bono, was gracious enough to give us a tour of the space.

Fotor3

This was great because we were able to hear firsthand the unforeseen difficulties that came with this project, as well as the unexpected insights. For instance, we learned that sourcing materials were the wild card of the project, eventually requiring a full-time staff of six people to manage it. Conversely, we learned that after speaking with the students of the school, the Restorative Design Collective found that many of the students' ideas were not only in line with the International Living Building Standards, but also quite innovative. For instance, one of the students suggested that it’d be great to have a river running through the building. The building now has a beautiful channel running through it that collects rainwater and flows through the space. Giving the students a chance to observe firsthand the building’s rainwater harvesting.

Although we are no longer students, not in the traditional sense anyway, we must say that we were inspired by our experience at the Bertschi School. We were reminded of why we love learning and academics: simply because learning can and should be FUN!

Would you like to read more from the team?

If you enjoy reading our blog as much as we enjoy writing it, that just makes our day! You might also enjoy a few of the related posts below. And, if there is a topic that you wish we would cover, let us know!

Use Your Words (Even When You Can’t)

Even in a profession where we quite literally draw pictures to communicate, words are incredibly important, too. Use them carefully, and precisely to get the job done right, and don’t forget that words can communicate very differently if they are said out loud versus written down, and there’s a time and place for both.

Channeling Experience: Storytelling in the Spaces We Design

Although we humans have invented new ways of sharing knowledge beyond the sharing of stories to one other over the firepit, storytelling is a key part of our culture. (Who doesn’t love a good story?) But beyond the stories we tell out loud, there is storytelling in spaces we design, too.

Unlikely Inspiration: The Strange Journeys of the Creative Process

A lot of times, unlikely inspiration solves your problems. To non-designers, it may seem a little crazy, but just as any odd thing can remind you of something else entirely, for designers, that experience often triggers their brains about a project they are working on, taking them on a mental journey towards a design solution.

Considering a project, or curious about something?

Say hello, and send us your questions via the form below. We’re always pleased to make new connections, and eager to get to know you, your project, and your goals.

Get in touch.