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2016 Best Development Award Ceremony

 

1000 Friends of Iowa to hold 2016 Best Development Award Ceremony

January 4, 2017 (Des Moines, Iowa) – 1000 Friends of Iowa is pleased to announce the winners of its 2016 Best Development Awards. The awards program publicly recognizes efforts that visibly support the organization’s mission of responsible land use. The winners are models of responsible development practices. Julia McGuire, Award Coordinator, notes, “Our winners and their respective works will positively impact future generations of Iowans and deserve our applause.”

1000 Friends of Iowa will hold an awards ceremony on Thursday, Jan. 19, 2017 at the Iowa State Capitol Building 1st Floor Rotunda from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. The public is invited to attend and congratulate the 2016 Best Development Award winners.

The 2016 Best Development Award winners are listed below (category, winner, project, city, short description. Long descriptions with photographs are forthcoming on the 1000 Friends of Iowa website):

    • In the Renovated Residential category, Todd Schneider for the School House Apartments in Fort Madison. The School House Apartments, a 37-unit mixed-income apartment complex, includes affordable and market-rate options and was a major reinvestment in an existing public school building. Its close proximity to downtown makes walking and cycling viable for tenants. The complex has a 300 kW solar array system and each apartment features high-efficiency appliances, hybrid electric/heat pump water heater, Iowa Green Streets-compliant plumbing, and insulation to lower the building’s energy costs and resource use.
    • In the New Commercial category, Hope Haven Area Development Center Corporation for the Hopefully Yours Thrift and Gift Shop in Burlington. After a devastating fire burned the old store to the ground, Hope Haven chose to build a brand new store to continue serving its 530 clients with disabilities and promoting the economic growth of downtown Burlington. As the first new construction on Jefferson St. in 40 years, the new store was built on space that had been vacant for nearly a decade. The architecture blends in with other downtown structures, has high efficiency HVAC, and LED lighting. It features thermally dynamic glass in all storefront glazing. The building meets ADA standards and has a Warren lift (hydraulic lift toilet). The nature of the business supports its responsible construction goals by employing 11 persons with disabilities, recycling textiles that are not suitable for sale by baling them, which in turn keeps material out of the landfill. The recycling program was also expanded to include cardboard, glass, and metals. Community support is evident by the tripling of donations and increase in sales. Donations in the new building occur under a covered drop-off area, which is more convenient for donors who are physically disabled or elderly.
    • In the Renovated Commercial category, Blackbird Investments for the Market One Building in Des Moines’ East Village. The Market One Building is on the National Register of Historic Places and adaptively reuses a factory for commercial space. A glass-enclosed conference room and 3,000 square feet of deck and shade canopy were added to the roof. The remainder of the roof was covered with photovoltaic panels and a planted (green) roof system. Additional primary sustainable building elements include: mini-rain gardens, native and perennial plantings, capture and delay water retention, geothermal heating and cooling technologies, solar photovoltaics on the parking canopy, dual flush toilets, permeable walk surfaces, lighting strategies, dedicated parking for High Occupancy Vehicle (also called HOV) workers and four charging stations for electric vehicles, and showers at each floor level. The combination of geothermal and solar energy sources along with LED lighting and an advanced refrigerant-based heating and cooling system has allowed project to achieve net-zero energy usage. The project is LEED platinum eligible.
    • In the Renovated Civic category, Angelo Architects for the Iowa Quilt Museum in Winterset. This 130-year old building is listed on the National Register of Historic Places and uses the original hardwood floors, tin ceiling, woodwork, lights, and cabinets. Energy efficient elements incorporated into the project include high efficiency HVAC, LED lighting, and removal of canvas awnings to bring natural light into the gift store. Very little environmental and economic construction impact was sustained because the building was repurposed and utilities already existed; despite minor tuckpointing, its historic status was maintained. By adaptively reusing an existing retail space, the final cost was approximately $15 per sq. ft. as opposed to estimated new construction cost of approximately $250 per sq. ft. minimum.
    • In the Mixed Use category, Indigo Dawn for the Green & Main project in Des Moines. The Green & Main project transformed an historic site from the National Register of Historic Places into a successful mixed use building with a health center on the bottom floors and a residential apartment on the upper level. Sustainability features of the site include soil quality restoration, bioswales, permeable pavers, subterranean retention, a green roof, rain gardens, rain barrels, and passive and active solar strategies. Each room can control its own climate with variable refrigerant flow technology and is supported by a geothermal well. Lighting is controlled by sensors, which feed data to the ISU Center for Building Energy Research. Waste diversion of 90 – 95% was achieved through resale, recycling, or repurposing items through site source separation.  The building sits on a bus route and has an electric charging station for alternative fuel vehicles. It is seeking LEED Platinum status.
    • In the Innovative Leadership category, Johnson County for its Solar Array and Soil Quality Restoration at Johnson County Administration Building in Iowa City. This 85 kW solar array sits above ground on a floodplain and former brownfield and armory site, and delivers 23% of the building’s electrical needs. Soil Quality Restoration beneath the array helps manage stormwater, improving water quality and reducing the amount of water that drains into nearby Ralston Creek, which outlets to the Iowa River. “Low-grow” grass under the array requires infrequent mowing. Located less than a mile from the center of Iowa City, the array and soil project are visible to thousands of passersby each day. The County has taken many outreach and education opportunities to a wide variety of organizations.
    • In the Renewable Energy category, Steffensmeier Welding and Manufacturing for its Solar Field in Pilot Grove. This project was the result of employees meeting to determine the benefits of solar energy at the manufacturing plant. The project is functioning at 100% and will significantly reduce overall costs over a 4-5 year time period with a return on costs after 5-6 years. It was designed to power all of the company’s electrical needs on a net-annual basis and is the first industrial manufacturing operation exclusively using solar energy in Iowa. With net-metering, the array will overproduce electricity in the summer, allowing credit to build with the serving utility. The credit will be drawn upon during winter months when production is lower due to shorter daylight periods and cloudy days.
    • In the Stormwater: Civic category, the City of Storm Lake for its North Central Stormwater Project in Storm Lake. This project was designed to relieve substantial overland flooding from approximately 150 acres of residential and school property. A unique treatment train concept diverts stormwater runoff from the main drainage channel into linear treatment basins instead of traditional pipe conveyance. This cost effective concept reduces infrastructure costs, provides significant regional flood control, reduces pollutant loading to Poor Farm Creek, adds aesthetics to the area, and is adaptive to future flooding. The project is the first in Iowa to use a gabion weir and sand-iron filing filtration system to remove soluble phosphorus.
    • In the Stormwater: Private category, Cherry Glen Learning Farm, for its Designed Watershed Mitigation in Polk City. Cherry Glen Learning Farm is the state’s first watershed mitigation farm. Containing two basins, the system receives mocha-looking high nitrate water and pumps clear and mostly nitrate-free water through irrigation via solar power. Forty percent of the clean water is returned to the aquifer. The farm includes acres committed to prairie and agro-forestry cropping. A high tunnel and attached greenhouse extend the growing season. Indoor and outdoor cooking centers are available for classes. On-site composting supplements the water management and improves soil health. 
    • In the Urban Placemaking category, The Alley KADTS for The Alley in Oskaloosa. An unwelcoming, litter-ridden space was transformed to an open corridor between the local mall to the historic Oskaloosa square. A grassroots group led the effort in a makeover that includes tables, umbrellas, seating, strings of LED ambience lights, planters (repurposed livestock tanks) with attached ‘walls’ for signage displays, and an artistic metal entrance archway. Many community organizations, companies, and the high school metal shop class were involved. The Alley has been used for community events, meetings, collaborations, musical and theatrical performances, as well as informal neighborly gatherings. The entrance arch embodies The Alley’s slogan, “Preserving Our Heritage While Building Our Future.”

The Best Development Award winners are selected from a pool of applicants each year and judged by an independent group of jurors. This 2016 jurors were, in alphabetical order, Liz Christiansen, Director of the Office of Sustainability at the University of Iowa; Maureen Collins-Williams, an Iowa public sector professional who trains, speaks and consults with 21st century entrepreneurs and innovators; Jeff Geerts, Special Projects Manager with the Community Development Division of the Iowa Economic Development Authority; Jeff Hanson, Community Development Operations Manager of the City of Sioux City, and Ryan Peterson, President of Impact7G.

1000 Friends of Iowa, founded in 1998, is a statewide nonprofit organization focused on land use education. Its mission is to unite Iowans in efforts to protect farmland and natural areas; revitalize neighborhoods, towns and cities; and improve quality of life for future generations. Its Best Development Awards program was established in 2001.

Additional details about each winning project and 1000 Friends of Iowa’s smart growth priorities can be found at www.1000FriendsofIowa.org.

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2015 Best Development Awards

Now Accepting Nominations for the 2015 Best Deve1000FRIENDSBDAlopment Awards

1000 Friends of Iowa’s Best Development Awards program is designed to bring attention to cities, companies, non-profit organizations, and individuals who demonstrate how responsible development and planning practices provide benefits to the community, the environment, and quality of life for future generations. Nominated buildings and projects help advance sustainability across our state by considering site placement, design, water efficiency, energy management, materials and resources used, indoor environmental quality, public use, and long-term benefits. There’s no entry fee to submit an application. Deadline is December 15, 2015. Apply today!

Categories:

  • New Residential
  • Renovated Residential
  • New Commercial/Civic
  • Renovated Commercial/Civic
  • Mixed Use
  • Leadership
  • Storm Water Management

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE BEST DEVELOPMENT AWARDS GUIDELINES AND APPLICATION.

Contact Lori Schervish at awards@1000friendsofiowa.org or Kari Carney at Kari@1000friendsofiowa.org with any questions.