Chartreuse Blog


Environ Biocomposites Dakota Burl
December 30, 2009, 4:12 pm
Filed under: Green Products | Tags:

Environ Biocomposites, located in Mankato, Minnesota, produces environmentally friendly alternatives to wood composite boards.  They use recycled materials and renewable agricultural resources to produce their beautiful and distinctive material options.

Dakota Burl, which utilizes the raw material of sunflower hulls, is made of 84% rapidly renewable and recycled content and is harvested within 250 miles (500 mile maximum) of Mankato, where it is manufactured.  This makes Dakota Burl a regional, recycled, and rapidly renewable material, assisting a project earn LEED credits under Materials and Resources.

Dakota Burl is also manufactured with a urethane based resin rather than a urea formaldehyde system utilizing no off-gassing solvents and emitting no VOCs into the atmosphere.  This helps a project earn LEED Indoor Environmental Quality credits.

Dakota Burl can be cut, sanded, and routed with traditional wood working tools and stained to change the materials appearance.  It is manufactured in four foot by eight foot panels and comes in ½”, ¾”, and 1” thicknesses.  It is intended for indoor horizontal and vertical surfaces including cabinetry, furniture, and architectural applications.

For additional information or to request a sample, visit Environ Biocomposites website at http://www.environbiocomposites.com.



January Green Drinks… Save the Date!
December 28, 2009, 4:01 pm
Filed under: Local Green Events | Tags:

Start the new year off right and make a GREEN new years resolution!

Where: Location TBD
When: Wednesday, January 27, 2010 5:00 until whenever!

Sign up for Green Drinks email updates on the Sioux Falls Green Drinks website by clicking here!

Green Drinks is a monthly mixer organized by Astronaut and the Sioux Falls Green Project for anyone interested in conversation about all aspects of sustainability. Sioux Falls is just one of 645 cities world wide making green conversation over drinks. For more information about Green Drinks check out the website at greendrinks.org.



Environ Biocomposites Biofiber Wheat
December 28, 2009, 3:30 pm
Filed under: Green Products | Tags:

Environ Biocomposites, located in Mankato, Minnesota, produces environmentally friendly alternatives to wood composite boards.  They use recycled materials and renewable agricultural resources to produce their beautiful and distinctive material options.

Biofiber Wheat can be cut, sanded, and routed with traditional wood working tools and stained to change the materials appearance.  It is manufactured in four foot by eight foot panels and comes in ½”, ¾”, and 1” thicknesses.  It is intended for indoor horizontal and vertical surfaces including cabinetry, furniture, and architectural applications.

Biofiber Wheat, which utilizes the raw material of wheat straw, a waste-product of the grain industry, is made of 94% rapidly renewable and recycled content and is harvested within 250 miles (500 mile maximum) of Mankato, where it is manufactured.  This makes Biofiber Wheat a regional, recycled, and rapidly renewable material, assisting a project earn LEED credits under Materials and Resources.

Biofiber Wheat is also manufactured with a urethane based resin rather than a urea formaldehyde system utilizing no off-gassing solvents and emitting no VOCs into the atmosphere.  This helps a project earn LEED Indoor Environmental Quality credits.

Biofiber Wheat is so green that it actually has a negative contribution to global warming offsetting the environmental impacts associated with harvesting, manufacturing, and transportation of the product.  Biofiber Wheat was evaluated with the BEES® (Building for Environmental and Economic Sustainability) software which calculates and compares a product’s environmental impact from raw material harvest, manufacturing and processing, shipping, use, and disposal.  The lower the score, the less impact a product has on our environment.  A negative score occurs because more carbon dioxide is removed during the wheat’s growth cycle than is produced during the harvest and manufacturing of the product.

Other wheat products manufactured by Environ Biocomposites include the Microstrand Wheat, a line of industrial grade materials replacing particleboard and plywood applications, and the msDor Core, a product line of non-rated and fire-rated door core panels.

For additional information or to request a sample, visit Environ Biocomposites website at http://www.environbiocomposites.com.



Centennial Woods Snow Fence
December 16, 2009, 3:02 pm
Filed under: Green Products | Tags:

We are always looking for really cool, green products and this is about as green as it gets. Centennial Woods’ Snow fence products are salvaged woods that do not require much (if any) added energy to be reused.

Located in Laramie, WY, Centennial Woods began reclaiming and repurposing weathered wood from Wyoming snow fences in 1999. Snow fence is used along Wyoming’s highways to control blowing snow. These nine to thirteen feet tall fences are made of fast-growing, untreated, ponderosa pine and lodge pole pine from the Rocky Mountain region.

Before Centennial Woods began repurposing this wood, it was often burned or sent to a landfill when boards were replaced.  Since 1999, Centennial Woods has reused “more than 5 million feet of snow fence, saving snow fence owners more than $9 million and avoiding emission of more than 9,000 tons of CO2 emissions.”

Snowfence can be used as siding, trim, soffit, fascia, flooring, ceiling, and walls.  The products are used in their weathered state.  They are also available milled, surfaced, and wirebrushed for flooring or other applications.  Snow fence does not need to be stained or treated.

View Snowfence spec sheets:
Flooring Spec Sheet
Reclaimed Lumber Spec Sheet
Centennial Woods Portfolio

To learn more or to request a sample, visit Centennial Woods’ website at http://www.centennialwoods.com or call (866) 778-8762.



Museum of Visual Materials: Teaching Green Design

The Museum of Visual Materials, in downtown Sioux Falls, was designed to accomplish three goals: create an interactive display for the owner’s collections; preserve the building’s original character; and incorporate green design principles to minimize operating costs and educate visitors about sustainability.

The owner’s collections are displayed using flexible display spaces around activity areas such as cooking, sewing, crafts, and music.  Simple display units were designed on castors for flexibility and the option to clear the large rooms for events.  The spaces were designed to maximize daylight for reading and viewing the collections.

The owner chose to use an abandoned building in the Sioux Falls Historic Warehouse District to house the collection.  Consolidated Tank Line Co. built the wood frame and rubble quartzite structure in 1887 after which it served as the Midwest headquarters for the Standard Oil Co. from 1896 until 1945.  Midland Distributing Company’s Seagram Products were distributed from the structure until the mid 80’s.  The building sat mostly empty for the next 20 years.

Koch Hazard Architects chose to gut the interior spaces leaving the original quartzite rubble walls and wood structure to preserve the buildings character.  Paint was sandblasted from the interior and exterior surfaces to reveal the warehouse’s original aesthetic.  Columns and webs milled from reused timbers were added to stabilize the trusses with custom gussets and bolts.  Many of the early alterations were retained as part of the building’s history.

Because the owner, a retired physician, had a lifetime focus on health, sustainable sensibility and stewardship was a guiding priority for designing the museum.  Sustainable design will lower ongoing operating costs and serve as a tool to educate others about healthy design.

The site and building incorporate many innovative and sustainable systems and technologies with the expectation of LEED Gold Certification from the USGBC.

All parking is off-site allowing native grasses and flowers to fill the exterior space.  Rainwater from the roof is collected and diverted to a small retention area.  A permeable serpentine path is used for learning about native plants through a self-guided tour.   Quartzite retaining walls provide exterior seating space in the plaza courtyard.

Low-flow fixtures and motion sensors save approximatly 30,000 gallons of water every year or about 30% over standard EPA efficiency.

A hybrid open loop geothermal system uses steady temperatures from the Sioux Aquifer for efficient heating and cooling.  Three inches of closed cell soy-based foam insulation where added to walls increase energy efficiency.  Energy efficient lighting with motion sensors and high efficiency glazing minimize heat gain, and an 8 kilowatt photovoltaic array on the roof generates energy.

Natural, regional materials were used including unstained wood trim from Minnesota and locally quarried quartzite.  35 freight skid palettes from the building’s Seagram distributor days were reused as a raised and removable floor in the utility room, as bases for the original rough columns in the atrium, as a backdrop to the kitchen, and as a trash enclosure off the alley.  Unstained bamboo and cork are also used in the display areas.

Low-emitting materials, operable windows, and daylighting and views were used to promote good indoor air quality.

Green cleaning and education programs further promote the building as a teacher of sustainable design and healthy buildings.

Photos by Stephen Parezo



Courthouse Square: Sustainable Design in SD
December 2, 2009, 2:21 pm
Filed under: Green Projects | Tags: , ,

Courthouse Square, a five-story office and retail building located in downtown Sioux Falls, is the second LEED Gold building in the state of South Dakota.  Designed by Koch Hazard Architects, it incorporates a number of environmentally significant systems and technologies including daylighting, renewable energy and geothermal templification, displacement ventilation, radiant heating and cooling, task lighting, low-emitting materials, and indoor chemical and pollutant source control.  78% of the building’s materials are regionally (within 500 miles) harvested and manufactured including the quartzite stone and architectural precast concrete façade.  Water conservation measures, including waterless urinals, save 140,000 gallons per year.  The design has far exceeded LEED Gold standards and is one of three projects nationally to win the 2006 GSA Environmental Award.1

The exterior of Courthouse Square was designed to respond to the neighboring US Courthouse without overwhelming it, despite its size.  A two story arcade of local quartzite reflects the tall arched windows of the historic courthouse across the street.  The 3rd and 4th stories above incorporate wide windows spaced in a system of architectural concrete, and the 5th story is set back behind a mansard style roof with elegant dormer windows reducing the apparent size of the building.

Photos by Stephen Parezo



Cherapa Place: Green Building in SD
December 1, 2009, 6:02 pm
Filed under: Green Projects | Tags: , ,

Photo by Aaron Holmberg

Cherapa Place, a 140,000 square foot office building located on the East Bank of the Big Sioux River in downtown Sioux Falls, is the first LEED Gold Building in the state of South Dakota.  Designed by Koch Hazard Architects, the site and building incorporate many innovative and sustainable systems and technologies reducing energy consumption by 40% and water use by 15%.  Other green strategies include the redevelopment of a brownfield site, stormwater management, green roofs, and a native landscape.  Also, 60% of the building’s materials are regionally (located within 500 miles) harvested and manufactured such as the quartzite stone on the building’s base.

Quartzite is a stone that was commonly used in Sioux Falls architecture until the early 20th century because the city is located on a large quartzite formation.  The façade of Cherapa Place uses over 8,500 square feet of this stone.

The interior of the building features tabletops made of pressed sorghum and cabinetry and trim made from pressed wheat.

Photos from Aaron Holmberg