Feb. 16, 2006
King County honors 'green building' achievements
Employees recognized for sustainable designs, recycling, conserving resources

Nearly
two dozen King County employees whose exceptional efforts have helped
King County become a nationally recognized leader in green, sustainable
building were honored for their work Feb. 15 at the first-annual
Green Building Summit in Tukwila.
The "Excellence in Building Green Awards" honor employees
who contributed to protecting King County's natural resources
by actively applying green-building techniques into their projects,
including using recycled materials, salvaging old construction materials
for future uses and designing projects with minimal impacts to the
environment.
"These are the public servants who are bringing us new ways
of achieving excellence and helping us work smarter in county government,"
said King County Executive Ron Sims, a longtime advocate of the
"building green" philosophy. "Their ideas and
work give the citizens of our county the double benefit of a healthier
environment and the efficient, cost-effective services that we deliver
every day."
The Green Building Summit featured David Eisenberg, a founder of
the Development Center for Appropriate Technology and a former board
member of the U.S. Green Building Council. Eisenberg was the keynote
speaker for the inaugural Green Building Summit.
"The winners of these awards have exceeded King County's
already high expectations for delivering products and services in
a manner that is both environmentally friendly and financially responsible,"
said Pam Bissonnette, Director of the King County Natural Resources
and Parks, and the awards presenter.
The Excellence in Building Green Award winners for 2005 are:
Cynthia Moffitt, King County Department of Development
and Environmental Services -- For raising awareness about sustainable
development practices and instituting successful programs to further
King County's mission to support green building.
Butch Lovelace, King County Parks Division --
For his work to ensure Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design
certification for the Marymoor Maintenance Facility Project.
Bob Burns, Deputy Director, King County Department
of Natural Resources and Parks -- For sponsoring the county-wide
"green building team" and leading "Urban Green,"
a non-profit organization that provides education and outreach on
green building.
Harbor Island Deconstruction Project Team -- Francis
Gaspay, Katie Spataro, Kinley Deller and Mike Long, for their work
in to ensure that two wooden warehouse buildings of historical significance
were deconstructed and the materials salvaged. More than 90 percent
of the wood from the buildings was recycled or reused. The buildings
had been slated for demolition because of safety concerns.
Lakewood Family Center Team -- Kevin Brown, Kurt
Triplett, Jessie Israel, TJ Davis, Katie Spataro, DeSean Quinn and
Sarah Jepson, for bringing cutting edge ideas in green design to
the construction of a community center in King County's Lakewood
Park. The team encouraged their non-profit partners, the Technology
Access Foundation, to incorporate green building practices and conservation
education into the project.
Henderson/M.L. King CSO Project Team -- Rick Andrews,
Tim Goon, Alton Gaskill, Kathy Mathena and Christie True, for their
work on this Wastewater Treatment Division project that will help
eliminate overflows from sewers to Lake Washington during extreme
storms. The project was designed before the LEED program was implemented
in King County, but many components of the work contain green building
elements.
DDES Sustainably Landscaped Gardens Team -- Karen
May, Cynthia Moffitt and Doug Rice, for excellence in planning,
designing and installing three sustainably landscaped gardens. The
gardens serve as examples of affordable, sustainable and attractive
landscaping that is in harmony with the local climate. Native and
climate-adapted plans that require minimal additional watering were
used in the gardens.
The winners' awards were made of recycled glass and were
designed and created by Bedrock Industries, a King County Link-Up
partner that produces a number of home and garden products using
recycled glass.
More information on building green in King County is available
at http://dnr.metrokc.gov/topics/sustainable-building/
on the Internet.