SAN DIEGO COMMUNITY COLLEGE DISTRICT
2009 Sustainability Summary Presented to SDCCD Board of Trustees
January 28, 28 2010 1
SDCCD 2009 Sustainability Summary
Waste Diversion The District continues to divert a significantly higher percentage of its waste stream than the 50% required by legislation. 2006
2007 72%
2008*
City College
70.6%
74.3%
Mesa College g
57.8%
59%
66.9%
Miramar College
61.2%
69.5%
70.2%
Continuing Education
62.5%
92.4%
87.7%
District Office/DSC
63 3% 63.3%
78%
66 66.4% 4% 2
SDCCD 2009 Sustainability Summary
Per Capita Diversion (Per SB 1016) Pounds per day disposal p y p Target Reported Target Institution (Employee) (Employee) (Student) City <4.7 0.5 <0.2 Mesa <3.1 0.6 <0.2 Miramar <3.2 0.8 <0.2 Continuing Education <2.7 2.1 <0.1 District Office/DSC <1.8 0.2 --
Reported (Student) 0.0 0.0 0.1 0.0 --
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SDCCD 2009 Sustainability Summary
Gas Usage
4
SDCCD 2009 Sustainability Summary
Electrical Usage
5
SDCCD 2009 Sustainability Summary
Electrical Usage – Self‐Generated ,3 3 73
3, 37 9
,4 64 3, 33 6
4,000,000
,5 46
4,500,000
4, 14 0
4, 368
,4 33
Electrical Use Self-Generated
2, 498
3,000,000 kWHR
Mesa College
,5 32
3,500,000
Miramar College
2,500,000 2,000,000 1,500,000 1,000,000 500,000 0
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
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SDCCD 2009 Sustainability Summary
kWH per Square Foot
11 . 88 8
11 . 46 1
11 . 6
11 .1 2
4
46
4 11 . 82
12.000
11 . 44 8
12
.05
5
0 .49 12
14.000
13 . 15 7
kWh/Square Foot
10.000
kWh
8.000 6.000 4.000 2 000 2.000 0.000 2000-01
2001-02
2002-03
2003-04
2004-05
2005-06
2006-07
2007-08
2008-09
Year
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SDCCD 2009 Sustainability Summary
Water Usage
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SDCCD 2009 Sustainability Summary
Solar Initiative (PPA with Borrego Solar) Site
Type
Production (kWh)
City LRC Roof City Harry West Gym Roof District Office Parking Lot Carport District Office Building Roof West City Carport Mid-City Roof Miramar Parking Lots Carport Mesa Parking Structure Carport Mesa Parking Lot #1 Carport Mesa Parking Lot #2 Carport
140,060 257,858 422,490 42 283 42,283 388,403 82,844 1,833,468 303,079 590,870 848,947
TOTAL
4,910,302
Estimated Start-up Date (2010) September October September September September September September September September October
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SDCCD 2009 Sustainability Summary
Solar Projects Outside PPA ECC Skills Center Installed a 56 kW SDG&E-owned SDG&E owned PV system. system Expected to generate 98,112 kWh annually and save 54 tons of CO2 annually. City College CTC Will install 51 kW District-owned PV system. Expected to generate 80,918 kWh annually and save 44 tons of CO2 annually. Miramar College Classroom Buildings Plans to install a 100kW District District-owned owned PV system on new classroom buildings. Expected to generate 175,200 kWh annually and save 96 tons of CO2 annually. 10
SDCCD 2009 Sustainability Summary
CCC/IOU Incentives 2006-09 SDCCD COMPLETED PROJECTS CAMPUS
PROJECT DESCRIPTION
kWh SAVINGS
THERM SAVINGS
INCENTIVE PAID
ECC and City College
Exterior Lighting Controls
64,866
-
$
9,730
ECC
Welding Machine Replacement
49,432
-
$
7,416
Mesa College
Chiller Conversions/ Boiler replacement
$
77,841
Mesa College g
Exterior Lighting g g Controls
$
9,399 ,
Miramar College
Motors, Turbocor, Boiler retrofits
$
54,938
Miramar College
Exterior Lighting Controls
41,115
-
$
6,167
City College
Exterior Lighting Controls
88,791
-
$
13,319
City College
Boiler replacement
$
3,639
City College
Turbocor Chiller Retrofit
City College
Parking Garage Lighting Upgrade
CE Mid City Campus
Exterior Lighting Controls
CE Mid City Campus
T-Stat and EMS Upgrade
TOTAL ENERGY SAVINGS
199,622 62,657 , 186,257
-
13,600 7,163
3,639
216,406
-
$
69,250
90,272
-
$
13,541
5 124 5,124
-
$
769
-
$
19,579
24,402
$
285,588
81,580
1,086,122
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SDCCD 2009 Sustainability Summary
SDG&E Savings by Design Project Name City College LRC Renovation
Est. T-24 %
Est. kWh saved
Est. Therms Saved
Est. Owner Incentive
N/A
30,006
339
$2,641
West City Center
38 1% 38.1%
243 715 243,715
-204 204
$52 305 $52,305
Miramar College Field House
16.6%
140,434
1,535
$13,801
Mesa College Police Station
23.6%
23,876
178
$7,050
Mesa College g Parking g Garage g
55.4%
366,100 ,
0
$18,305 ,
Educational Cultural Complex Skills Center
21.5%
122,266
2,273
$32,334
Allied Health
11.4%
57,502
149
$17,122
Miramar College LLRC
22.6%
248,754
1,192
$68,741
Vocational Technology Center (City College)
23.8%
260,953
2,691
$77,586
Voc. Tech. Parking Structure
56.5%
314,344
0
$15,717
Student Services
30.0%
393,240
0
$170,156
Classrooms A & B
25 0% 25.0%
246 304 246,304
2 060 2,060
$91 129 $91,129
Autotech Career Bldg
25.0%
18,442
0
$8,397
Miramar Parking Structure #1
86.4%
354,536
0
$11,111
2,820,472
10,213
$586,395
Total
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SDCCD 2009 Sustainability Summary
Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design LEED is an internationally recognized green building certification system, providing third‐ party verification that a building was designed and built using strategies aimed at improving performance across all the metrics that matter most: improving performance across all the metrics that matter most: • • • • •
Energy savings Water efficiency Reduction of CO2 emissions Improved indoor environmental quality Stewardship of resources and sensitivity to their impacts.
The four certification levels include Platinum, Gold, Silver and Basic Certification
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SDCCD 2009 Sustainability Summary
LEED – City College LEED Gold – Arts & Humanities Building Business Technology Building Career Technology Center Career Technology Center LEED Silver – General Purpose Classroom Building R Building (Learning Resource Center) Science Building Science Building C Building M Building
C Career Tech Center T hC
General Purpose Classroom Building
Arts & Humanities/Business quad R Building (already certified!)
Science Building ld
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SDCCD 2009 Sustainability Summary
LEED – Mesa College LEED Gold – Allied Health Building Police Station LEED Silver – Student Services LEED Silver – Student Services Math and Science Building
Police Substation Allied Health Building Allied Health Building
Student Services
Math and Science Building
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SDCCD 2009 Sustainability Summary
LEED – Miramar College LEED Platinum – Police Station LEED Gold – Heavy Duty Advanced Transportation Tech. Center Arts & Humanities Classroom Building Business & Mathematics Classroom Building LEED Silver – Library Learning Resource Center (LLRC) Automotive Technology Career Bldg. Expansion St d t U i Student Union LEED Certified – Hourglass Park Field House Aviation Maintenance Tech. Center Expansion Business & Mathematics Police Station Student Union
LLRC Arts & Humanities 16
SDCCD 2009 Sustainability Summary
LEED – Continuing Education LEED Gold – North City Campus LEED Silver – West City Campus Linda Vista Campus i d i Cesar Chavez Center Skills Center at ECC
West City Campus
Cesar Chavez Center
North City Campus
Linda Vista Campus
ECC Skills Center 17
SDCCD 2009 Sustainability Summary
Sustainability Awards October 2009 Green California Community College Summit 2009 Leadership Award (Instructor) – Dr. Dr Karon Klipple Klipple, Professor of Mathematics and Co-Chair, Environmental Stewardship Committee, City College June 2009 9th Annual UC/CSU/CCC Sustainability Conference Best Practice - Lighting Design/Retrofit: Harry West Gym, City College Best Practice - Student Sustainability Program: City College Urban Farm Honorable Mention - Best Overall Design: West City Campus Campus, Continuing Ed Ed. May 2009 American Society of Civil Engineers (SD Chapter) 20th Annual Awards Award of Merit – West City Campus American Institute of Architecture – Annual Design Awards Design Visionary Award - P Building Renovation at City College
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SDCCD 2009 Sustainability Summary
Sustainability Presentations “Get Green, Go Lean! How Lean Construction, Integrated Project Delivery and LEED Can Help You Optimize Project R lt Results and Maximize Efficiencies” d M i i Effi i i ” Presentation to Community Colleges Facilities Coalition (CCFC) November 4, 2009 Dave Umstot, Lance Lareau, John Messick
“Green Construction and Integrated Project Delivery” Presentation to Green California Community College Summit October 6, 2009 Dave Umstot
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SDCCD 2009 Sustainability Summary
Sustainability Presentations “LEEDing the Way” “Daylighting Retrofit Best Practices” Presentation to the UC/CSU/CCC Sustainability Conference June 22‐23, 2009
“LEEDing the Way: Developing and Implementing a Districtwide Green Building Policy” Green Building Policy Presentation to Smart and Sustainable Campuses Conference National Association of College and University Business Officers April 7 2009 April 7, 2009 20
SDCCD 2009 Sustainability Summary
District Standards Hand Dryers vs. Paper Towels Hand dryers reduce the cost of maintenance and custodial services and are more environmentally friendly. Financial Benefits Save $1,000 per year, per dryer in paper towel costs Additional savings from reduced trashcan liner use Energy efficient, drawing as little as 1150 watts Sanitary Benefits Help restrooms stay cleaner Reduce bacteria on hands Dry hands in 12 seconds; remove 99.9% of bacteria from air used to dry hands 21
SDCCD 2009 Sustainability Summary
Sustainability at City College Campus & Community Outreach – Annual Earth Fair, Bike Fair – Green Speaker Series - including films and field trips – Student Club, RecycleMania, Flex sessions • Policy & Procedure – Sustainability Policy and Procedure, GHG Report – Campus and District ESC • Curriculum & Programs – Solar Technology Certificate – Sustainability Certificate and AA – Sustainable Urban Agriculture Certificate and AA – Integration in existing programs • Results – Recycler of the Year – Urban Land Institute Smart Growth Award – Green California CC Faculty Leadership Award
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SDCCD 2009 Sustainability Summary
Sustainability at Mesa College • November 2009: Students and faculty broke ground and planted the first seedlings in the Green Garden on the Mesa. The garden’s produce is used by Culinary Arts students in the MFusion culinary laboratory. • Each semester: The ESC’s Eco Awareness Series offers green lectures and films to the campus community. it • During Canyon Day 09, 50 volunteers hauled five truckloads of trash, non-native plants and an even dozen shopping carts out of Tecolote canyon. And around campus… • Water-guzzling lawns are being replaced with rock and natural nat ral gardens. gardens • In the classroom, committees and departments, documents are distributed via email and posted online,, saving g trees and dollars. Mesa College Recycling Program v2
www.sdmesa.edu/ecomesa
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SDCCD 2009 Sustainability Summary
Sustainability at Miramar College
Faculty Sustainability Coordinator hired Spring 2009
Organic Garden/ Composting
Stormwater detention and filtration system
S a t Irrigation/ Smart gat o / Sustainable Landscaping
Sustainability in the Curriculum Workshops Water Bottle Resolution
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SDCCD 2009 Sustainability Summary
Greenhouse Gas Inventory SDCCD Emissions Split (FY2008): 25,003 Total MT eCO2
2% 2% 3% 3%
Commuting
1%
0%
Purchased Electricity On-Campus Stationary (Natural Gas)
3%
Scope 2 Transmission & Distribution Losses from Electricity
9% 46%
Directly Financed Outsourced Travel (District-funded) Paper Direct Transportation (Fleet Services) Solid Waste ((Landfilled Waste))
31%
Refrigerants & Chemicals Agriculture (Synthetic & Organic Fertilizers)
25
SDCCD 2009 Sustainability Summary
Greenhouse Gas Inventory 30,000
Sco pe 2 T & D Lo sses P aper
Total Em missions (Metric c Tons eCO2)
25,000
Wastewater So lid Waste
20,000
Study A bro ad A ir Travel Directly Financed Outso urced Travel Co mmuting
15,000
P urchased Steam/Chilled Water P urchased Electricity
10,000
A griculture Refrigerants & Chemicals
5,000 Direct Transpo rtatio n On-Campus Statio nary
0 2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
Year
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SAN DIEGO COMMUNITY COLLEGE DISTRICT
Questions? David D id U Umstot t t Vice Chancellor F iliti M Facilities Managementt dumstot@sdccd.edu (619)388 6546 (619)388-6546
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