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About Us - Our "Green Buildings"How Our Building Project Got Started In 1997, RAFI purchased a beautiful 2.8 acre lot in Pittsboro, NC. On
it stood a 3,389 SF house dating from 1830. We enlisted the office of
Giles Blunden Architect of Carrboro, NC to lead a design charrette. The
charrette brought together design and construction professionals, local
authorities and members of the community to brainstorm ideas and achieve
consensus on how to best develop the property in an environmentally sound
way. We considered renovating the house for offices but were advised that it would be too costly and would not yield the energy-efficient, low-maintenance building we desired. The house was in poor condition and had been so extensively renovated that few original features remained. Through Preservation North Carolina, we advertised the house to be moved off site but had no takers. Failing to preserve the house intact, we chose to give it a new life by deconstructing it and reusing materials in new construction. Deconstruction RAFI-USA had the good fortune to be introduced to Pete and Robin Hendricks
at the March 1998 Southeastern Green Building Conference where Pete had
been named Recycler of the Year. Experts in deconstruction, the process
of taking down old buildings so that materials can be reused and recycled
instead of being disposed in landfills, Pete and Robin agreed to undertake
RAFI's deconstruction project. "Green" Design Architect Alicia Ravetto and landscape architect David Swanson of Chapel Hill, NC sited RAFI-USA's office building on the same ground where the house had stood. Care was taken in locating the building to preserve the many hardwood trees, while still allowing ample direct sun to the building in the wintertime and shade during the summer months. Proper siting and orientation of a building are key issues when designing a passive solar, daylit building. RAFI-USA's office building is one-story elongated east to west. One of the design goals was to provide all offices and meeting rooms with daylighting so that natural lighting would replace artificial lighting most of the time during the year. Daylighting is not the simple use of windows but the adequate amount
and orientation of glazing so that there is enough natural light to displace
the use of artificial lighting without adding unwanted heat and glare.
In the RAFI building, this was accomplished by providing south facing
windows in all workspaces facing south and clerestories on the offices
facing north. A patio was created between two wings of the building in
order to accommodate solar and daylighting in a compact floor design.
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| RAFI-USA is a private non-profit organization based in Pittsboro, NC dedicated to community, equity and diversity in agriculture. | |