DUKE MARINE LABORATORY BREAKS
GROUND FOR NEW OCEAN SCIENCE TEACHING CENTER
New center will be Marine Lab’s first totally
‘green’ building and the first new academic building
on the Beaufort campus in 30 years.
April 22, 2004 -- More than 100 faculty, students,
Marine Lab Advisory Board members and distinguished
guests joined Dean William Schlesinger and Dr.
Michael
Orbach, director of the Duke
Marine Laboratory, to celebrate the groundbreaking
of the Marine Lab’s new $1.5 million Ocean Science
Teaching Center on April 24 at the Beaufort campus.
The 5,000-square-foot center, to be located at
the point of Pivers Island, will be the first
new academic building constructed on the Beaufort
campus in 30 years, and the Marine Lab’s first
totally “green” building, designed to the highest
standards for energy and environmental efficiency
adopted by the U.S. Green Building Council. It
will house a teaching laboratory; a televideo-capable
lecture hall for team teaching and distance education;
interpretive educational displays; and spaces
for social interactions.
When completed in fall 2005, it will greatly
expand the Marine Lab’s teaching capacity and
enhance its capabilities for public outreach and
education.
A $2.3 million gift from naming donors Randy
Repass, chairman of West Marine Inc., and his
wife Sally-Christine Rodgers, to Duke’s Nicholas
School of the Environment and Earth Sciences helped
fund the center and create a new University Professorship
in Marine Conservation Technology at the Marine
Lab.
Repass and Rodgers were honored for their support
of the Nicholas School at a dinner at the Marine
Lab on Friday, April 23, as were longtime Marine
Lab friends and supporters Charles and Bernard
Blanchard.
Prior to the groundbreaking on Saturday, architect
Frank Harmon led a panel discussion on “green”
buildings and answered questions about the preliminary
design of the new center from a crowd of about
60 faculty members, board members, students and
local citizens.
At the groundbreaking ceremony itself, ten Naming
or Leadership donors joined Schlesinger and Orbach
in turning the first dirt for the new center.
They were: Randy Repass, Sally-Christine Rodgers
and their son, Kent-Harris Repass; Howard Hardesty;
Carolyn Thomas and her granddaughter Margaret
Wilbanks; Richard Seale; Albert Oettinger; Mrs.
Alton B. Smith; and Robert Hardy. Two donors,
Bob Schwartz and the Wade Family, were unable
to attend.
A grant from the Wallace Genetic Foundation will
make it possible to build the new Ocean Sciences
Teaching Center to LEED (Leadership in Energy
and Environmental Design) certification standards.
In accordance with LEED, the center will incorporate
green technologies such as solar and geothermal
energy, tidal and wind power, and sustainable
materials such as bamboo paneling and concrete
made from fly ash.
Media contact: Tim Lucas, 919/613-8084 or
tdlucas@duke.edu
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