I
expect that other mayors will soon have the chance to attend future workshops
around the country featuring Mayor Malloy’s efforts. The American Sustainable Business Council,
Natural Resources Defense Council and White
House Council on Environmental Quality will be working to make that happen. Hopefully the Fairfield experience will soon
be coming to a South Carolina city near you.
-----------------------------------------------------
Des
Moines Register
November 2, 1013
November 2, 1013
Fairfield defines
community action
Jefferson County town shows how to 'manufacture
dreams' through civic collaboration
Written by
ROX LAIRD
Fairfield, Ia. – Drive around this Jefferson County seat with Mayor Ed Malloy and you begin to understand why this town is considered unique in Iowa.
Fairfield, Ia. – Drive around this Jefferson County seat with Mayor Ed Malloy and you begin to understand why this town is considered unique in Iowa.
The obvious
reason is the presence of Maharishi University of Management that is a magnet
for transcendental meditation devotees from around the world, which is evident
as Malloy wheels around the downtown square. It is lined with unusual shops,
art galleries, bookstores, restaurants offering international fare, imported
chocolates and teas. A monthly First Friday Art Walk draws a cross-section of
the community and people from around the state.
Just off the
square, across from the Jefferson County Courthouse, sits the community center
and the Stephen Sondheim Center for the Performing Arts. It is home to what is
described as the only professional live musical theater company in the state
and attracts a variety of performing arts events.
A couple of
blocks on is Malloy’s oil trading company, housed in an office building built
according to the ancient Indian principles of Maharishi Vedic architecture that
seeks harmony with the energy of the sun and nature for the well-being of
occupants. Many examples of Vedic design can be seen in Fairfield and in
Maharishi Vedic City, incorporated in recent years.
Fairfield is a
town of contrasts, where you can see a BMW parked on the street next to a
pickup truck. The native population has increasingly accepted immigrants who
brought a different culture and an entrepreneurial spirit that invigorates the
city’s economy. Fairfield has earned a long list of plaudits in numerous “best
of” categories, including the April Smithsonian magazine’s list of “The 20 Best
Small Towns in America.”
Fairfield lives green
Among the
striking things about Fairfield is its ethic of self-sufficient sustainability.
This manifests itself in many ways, such as a cooperative organic food market
and a solar-powered radio station run by volunteers. Solar panels sprout from
roofs and from freestanding structures. The city of Fairfield has an energy
efficiency coordinator, whose salary is shared by the city and by Iowa State
University’s extension service.
In the city’s industrial
park, Sky Factory uses backlit photography to create outdoor scenes for
ceilings of hospitals and medical clinics. The plant has set aside space next
to its parking lot for an array of solar panels and a garden tended by
employees.
On the opposite
side of town, a mostly off-the-grid subdivision called Abundance EcoVillage
captures energy from the wind and the sun, and draws air for heating and
cooling from the Earth.
This
conservation ethic runs deeper in the community than these outward symbols of
alternative and renewable energy sources. As a participant in Alliant Energy’s
Hometown Rewards program, Fairfield took on a challenge beginning on Earth Day
in 2012 to reduce its overall energy consumption by 4 percent. It hit that and
exceeded it: Fairfield residents shaved electric and natural gas consumption by
8.5 percent and businesses cut theirs by 8 percent.
Working with
Alliant, which provided marketing and technical support, the city held
workshops for residents and business owners, some 4,500 participants pledged to
meet energy savings goals by doing laundry in cold water and installing compact
fluorescent light bulbs. A fund was created to make loans for new windows and
insulation.
The total
savings of 10.2 million kilowatt hours of gas and electricity is enough energy
to power 1,077 homes for one year, according to Alliant, which independently
verified the energy savings. Besides the savings on power bills, Alliant
dangled a carrot in the form of a grant of nearly $19,000, which the city put toward
installation of solar panels on the roof of the Fairfield Library this summer.
Alliant Energy
spokesman Justin Foss attributed the success of this impressive energy savings
to the level of community engagement, working at a neighbor-to-neighbor level
creating peer pressure that came from an active group that led the charge.
“This is a
program that works really well for Fairfield,” Foss said. “You can’t do that in
every community.”
A foot in both worlds
Ed Malloy is
perhaps the best example of how Fairfield has melded small town Iowa values
with the exotic culture inspired by Maharishi Mahesh Yogi. Malloy is an
immigrant from New York, practices TM and lives in a spacious and handsome home
built to the exacting Vedic principles. He moves comfortably among traditional
and nontraditional Fairfield, which is evident from his support by voters for
more than a decade.
Malloy says
Fairfield’s can-do culture begins with setting ambitious goals, but
achievements are celebrated by the entire community, not just the strong core
of transcendental meditation followers fed by Maharishi University.
In Fairfield, Malloy said, “people go out and manufacture
their dreams. When we all share the pride, that’s when everything changes.”
Classroom building is a lesson in sustainability
Fairfield, Ia. – Maharishi University of Management here set out three years ago to build a new classroom building for its sustainable living program that lived up to the department’s mission. The finished product may be the greenest building in Iowa.
The building is constructed of compressed-earthen blocks manufactured by students on site and load-bearing timbers consisting of full-size aspen tree trunks. It generates more energy than it consumes. It collects and treats rainwater from the roof for drinking and flushing. Daylight supplies two-thirds of light in classrooms and offices during the day. Passive and active solar energy is stored in 600 tons of earthen blocks and a 5,000-gallon water tank, which is supplemented with wind-generated electricity. It has a greenhouse for growing plants indoors and edible landscaping outdoors.
The Schwartz-Guich Sustainable Living Center is performing exactly as intended. In fact, it is “exceeding our expectations in energy efficiency in cooling and heating seasons,” said Lawrence Gamble, professor of sustainable living at MUM and an irrepressible evangelist on the subject of renewable energy and natural resource conservation.
Standing beside the center’s electric meter outside the building recently, Gamble pointed to the spinning wheel that measures electric consumption. The wheel was going backward, however, meaning the building was returning power to the electric grid. In fact, according to Gamble, the center produces about a third more energy than it consumes. And it consumes less than a quarter of what an ordinary building of the same size would consume.
Besides employing nearly every imaginable green building technique, the Sustainable Living Center design follows the principles of Maharishi Vedic architecture, an ancient design philosophy from India that puts buildings in harmony with nature. It is hard to imagine a building that does a better job of meeting that goal.
No comments:
Post a Comment