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| Graham Lab | Environmental Education Center | Wind Turbine | Green Touchscreen Kiosk |
The facilities are available for use by other groups, organizations, or individuals
seeking a meeting space with access to the diversity of organisms and habitats
present at CERA. Contact the CERA Director for more
information.
Graham Lab
The well-equipped lab provides easy access to both field and lab equipment,
a reference library with field guides, computer access, an herbarium, and an
insect collection. A greenhouse was constructed next to the lab in 2000 to
provide space for experimenting with and propagating native plants for transplanting
at CERA. Built in 1983, the lab is named for Benjamin F. Graham, Jr., Professor Emeritus of Biology at Grinnell College.
Environmental Education Center (EEC)
Hours: M-F 9:00 am - 5:00 pm.
Photo by Dale Photographics, Pella IA
Click here for a brochure (PDF, formatted to be printed and tri-folded).
This facility is open to the public during normal weekday business hours. The
classrooms may be in use during this time, but the restrooms, drinking fountains,
information
kiosk, and hallway displays are open to the public. Weekend tours of the facility
can be accommodated if arrangements are made 1-2 weeks in advance. Please
contact the CERA manager to arrange a tour.
The Environmental Education Center was completed in April 2005 (see photos from the dedication open house). At about 7000
sq. ft., plus an adjacent 1900 sq. ft. maintenance shed, it will
allow us to expand research and teaching activities and safely carry out management
activities. The new facilities are situated at the crest of the grasslands at the north
central part of CERA, near the existing road and overlooking the valley that reaches
Perry Pond (see map with building site).
A classroom and a teaching lab will support 24 students each, and flexible layouts can be
reconfigured for greater capacity when needed. A sweeping glass wall will open the
teaching spaces to the south toward the grasslands. Support spaces include office, classroom, and greenhouse.
The construction of the EEC was part of PHASE II of the Noyce Science Center Renovation/Construction Project.
In 2006, the building was the first in Iowa to receive the Leadership in Energy
and Environmental Design (LEED) Gold Rated designation. In 2007, Chicago
architects Holabird&Root were awarded the Design Excellence Award for
Sustainability for the project; the award is presented biennially by the Chicago Institute for Architects.
Wind Turbine
The 50 kW wind turbine will provide over 90% of the electricity needs for the
Environmental Education Center. The wind power will reduce carbon dioxide
emissions related to energy use by the facility by 200,000 pounds per year.
Follow these links for photos or videos of the installation; videos courtesy of The Grinnell Magazine.
The Spring 2007 issue of The Grinnell Magazine included an article about the wind turbine; copies available by request.
CERA Green Touchscreen Kiosk
The interactive kiosk explains the
building's green design features (like the geothermal heating-cooling system, and
cistern for gray water recycling), graphs real-time data on water and energy use
(in comparison to similarly-sized buildings), summarizes curricular, research,
restoration, and outreach uses of CERA, and provides real-time weather data from
the CERA weather station.
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