



Can a small Kansas town leveled by a twister revive its fortunes by becoming an energy-efficient, eco-conscious community?
By Emily Gertz | June 12, 2009 | 1
One of many residential lots for sale in Greensburg, flanked to the south and west by rebuilt homes. Around 900 people remain from a pre-tornado population of 1,500.
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Greensburg’s grain silo was one of the few structures left after the May 2007 tornado obliterated the town.
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The May, 4 2007, tornado turned Greensburg’s old water tower into a twisted pile of metal wreckage. The new water tower was dedicated on May 3, 2008....[More]
The May, 4 2007, tornado turned Greensburg’s old water tower into a twisted pile of metal wreckage. The new water tower was dedicated on May 3, 2008. To some it symbolizes the city’s comeback. [Less] [Link to this slide]
Daniel Wallach, founder and director of Greensburg GreenTown, hopes to fund and build 12 homes, each featuring different architecture and green features....[More]
Daniel Wallach, founder and director of Greensburg GreenTown, hopes to fund and build 12 homes, each featuring different architecture and green features. He envisions Greensburg as an ecotourist destination for people who want to book stays at the homes and "try on" green living. GreenTown has also coordinated donations of ecofriendly building supplies for rebuilding local homes. [Less] [Link to this slide]
Bob Dixson, mayor of Greensburg, believes that although going green will improve the town's economy, "the main thing is that it's the right, prudent, responsible thing to do....[More]
Bob Dixson, mayor of Greensburg, believes that although going green will improve the town's economy, "the main thing is that it's the right, prudent, responsible thing to do. It's about being good stewards of the resources that we've been blessed with on this Earth." [Less] [Link to this slide]
The 5.4.7 Arts Center, located in the center of Greensburg, is Kansas's first LEED Platinum building. Designed and built by University of Kansas architecture students, it gets energy from three 600-watt wind turbines connected to a bank of batteries, along with photovoltaic panels on the roof....[More]
The 5.4.7 Arts Center, located in the center of Greensburg, is Kansas's first LEED Platinum building. Designed and built by University of Kansas architecture students, it gets energy from three 600-watt wind turbines connected to a bank of batteries, along with photovoltaic panels on the roof. Three geothermal wells control heating and cooling. Passive energy-efficient systems, including a four-inch- (10-centimeter-) thick concrete floor, exterior UV-blocking glass, and a green roof enhance the structure’s light environmental footprint. The center does double duty as Greensburg's community center [Less] [Link to this slide]
The S. D. Robinett Building, built in 1915, was the only structure in Greensburg’s business district to survive the May 2007 tornado. Owners Gary and Erica Goodman hope to operate an antiques store on the first floor and live on the second....[More]
The S. D. Robinett Building, built in 1915, was the only structure in Greensburg’s business district to survive the May 2007 tornado. Owners Gary and Erica Goodman hope to operate an antiques store on the first floor and live on the second. Their energy-efficient renovations include extra attic insulation, along with installing an environmentally friendly furnace and new windows. The Goodmans are also using less toxic paints and putting in a low-flow toilet to conserve water. [Less] [Link to this slide]
Greensburg's "Sun Chips Business Incubator" in early December, 2008, shortly after construction began. Sponsored by the USDA and Frito-Lay, the building has been designed and constructed to the LEED Platinum standard....[More]
Greensburg's "Sun Chips Business Incubator" in early December, 2008, shortly after construction began. Sponsored by the USDA and Frito-Lay, the building has been designed and constructed to the LEED Platinum standard. [Less] [Link to this slide]
The incubator opened on April 24, 2009 after about six months of construction. It rents about 10 spaces to small businesses, and provides them with technical assistance to help rebuild Greensburg's economy....[More]
The incubator opened on April 24, 2009 after about six months of construction. It rents about 10 spaces to small businesses, and provides them with technical assistance to help rebuild Greensburg's economy. Rents are $0.45 per square foot upstairs, plus $75 for monthly utilities, $0.60/$24 for utilities downstairs. Among the new businesses returning to Greensburg via the Incubator are the Kiowa County Journal newspaper, and a massage therapist; an attorney, a financial advisor, and a stained glass studio. [Less] [Link to this slide]
The corner lot for Greensburg GreenTown's first eco-home, the Silo. Daniel Wallach thinks locals are open to the unorthodox design: "The grain silo was one of the only things that survived the tornado," he says....[More]
The corner lot for Greensburg GreenTown's first eco-home, the Silo. Daniel Wallach thinks locals are open to the unorthodox design: "The grain silo was one of the only things that survived the tornado," he says. "People noticed that." [Less] [Link to this slide]
Florida-based Armour Homes has designed and built the Silo. The home is being built using materials and techniques similar to those used for grain silos; its concrete walls and cylindrical shape will give it the strength to resist winds up to 200 miles (320 kilometers) per hour....[More]
Florida-based Armour Homes has designed and built the Silo. The home is being built using materials and techniques similar to those used for grain silos; its concrete walls and cylindrical shape will give it the strength to resist winds up to 200 miles (320 kilometers) per hour. [Less] [Link to this slide]
The Silo eco-home, shortly after groundbreaking in early December, 2008. Green features will include solar-powered electricity, a roof vegetable garden, and passive ventilation.
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The Silo eco-home was much further along by the time GreenTown and Armour Homes dropped a car on it from a height of 60 feet, on April 9, 2009. The stunt demonstrated that the home could withstand a 160,000-pound impact on its roof or side -- a useful quality in a region prone to tornadoes....[More]
The Silo eco-home was much further along by the time GreenTown and Armour Homes dropped a car on it from a height of 60 feet, on April 9, 2009. The stunt demonstrated that the home could withstand a 160,000-pound impact on its roof or side -- a useful quality in a region prone to tornadoes. [Less] [Link to this slide]
NREL project manager Lynn Billman, intern Alexander Dane, and architect–engineer John K. Holton have been offering Greensburg guidance on rebuilding the town’s businesses and homes to be highly energy-efficient as well as consulting on the adoption of a green building code....[More]
NREL project manager Lynn Billman, intern Alexander Dane, and architect–engineer John K. Holton have been offering Greensburg guidance on rebuilding the town’s businesses and homes to be highly energy-efficient as well as consulting on the adoption of a green building code.
At a meeting in December with Greensburg Mayor Bob Dixson, City Administrator Steve Hewitt and other city officials, the NREL team recommended that Greensburg adopt the National Green Building Standard (NGBS), an emerging code developed by the National Association of Home Builders and the American National Standards Institute, and adapt it to the town's particular needs.
Like LEED, the NGBS has four levels and contains prescriptive standards—a construction project accumulates "points" toward certification—as well as performance-based standards that are assessed after completion.
Building to NGBS Bronze would result in considerable energy efficiency, as well as better indoor air quality, land use and other positive environmental impacts. It would also qualify both builder and homeowner for various federal and state clean energy and green building incentives that help to bring down construction costs.
"If we are truly going to be able to market the brand of being Greensburg," Dixson says, and attract new residents who share the town's green vision, "we have to prove that we're walking the walk." [Less] [Link to this slide]
Greensburg's Peace Lutheran Church meets in a manufactured modular unit set onto a wooden frame foundation on the site of its former church, ringed by empty lots; it plans to rebuild eventually....[More]
Greensburg's Peace Lutheran Church meets in a manufactured modular unit set onto a wooden frame foundation on the site of its former church, ringed by empty lots; it plans to rebuild eventually. Some of the city's trees survived the May 2007 twister, but are worse for the battering. [Less] [Link to this slide]
The planets Venus [top] and Jupiter shine over rebuilt homes and empty lots in Greensburg, Kan., on a cold night in December 2008.
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Add Commentlooking forward to seeeing the consequences
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