Showing posts with label Silver Lake Nature Center. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Silver Lake Nature Center. Show all posts

Thursday, April 18, 2013

Earthship for Earth Day

By Diane Davies-Dixon


On the eve of Earth Day, the Silver Lake Nature Center in Bristol Township is only a few months away from completing its “Earthship” project begun last summer.
The “fully sustainable, carbon-zero building” constructed of tires and other recycled materials, surrounded by a blanket of earth to control its climate, will become the center’s new Watershed Education Building.

Lorraine Skala, the nature center’s education director and assistant naturalist, traveled to New Mexico to visit “Earthship Biotecture” architect Michael Reynolds to learn how to build one at Silver Lake.
Diane Davies-Dixon/Photo
Silver Lake Nature Center's Earthship
With new-found knowledge and the dedication of her husband and many volunteers, plans for the only public Earthship on the East Coast took shape last summer.
“Everyone has latched on to the project,” which is being paid for by a $25,000 grant from Pennsylvania Department of community and Economic Development, said Skala. “It has a life of its own. It’s been an amazing project.”
Tire City donated the majority of the tires that were later filled with earth and stacked to create the walls of the building. Eventually the tires will be covered with plaster. Some facets will be left open to show visitors how the Earthship was constructed.
Earthships are approved by FEMA for hurricane and earthquake zones, according to Skala. She noted that even though the building in Silver Lake park is incomplete, the walls still withstood Hurricane Sandy.
“They are rubber and designed to move with the earth. They will not crack and crumble,” said Skala.
The term Earthship refers to a “ship that can sail on the earth of tomorrow and accommodate the changes coming with the weather,” according to Skala.
Built as a classroom, the Silver Lake facility will contain a 224-square-foot greenhouse fronting the structure. Most of the rough U-shaped building is covered by a grass berm.

Diane Davies-Dixon/Photo
Silver Lake Nature Center's Earthship
 The thick walls made of earth and tires is designed to trap heat, a kind of “thermal mass.” It takes a year to heat up, according to the designers. What that does is store heat. When the temp drops in the room the heat will come in from the wall. When the room gets warms up, the heat will travel back into the wall to creating cooler temperatures in the classroom.
“It’s an amazing system,” said Skala. “I never felt a draft or chill or anything when I stayed in one.”
A slanted metal roof will be used to shelter the Earthship and will funnel rainwater into a cistern, according to Skala.
Bucks County Technical High School students have been involved with the building’s plumbing. More volunteers are needed including block layers, carpenters and plasterers. The nature center will supply materials.
“Living close to your resources here, you are responsible for your water and your air. The plants will clean your air and you will have really high quality air in this class,“ said Skala.

Monday, September 3, 2012

Kelly's quest for the Silver



In a year of the just-completed Olympic Games, 13-year-old Kelly Young is closing in on a Silver.

A Girl Scout since kindergarten, the Lower Makefield teen is in line for Scouting’s second highest honor — the Silver Award — for leadership and community involvement.

She released scores of monarch butterflies this summer at the Silver Lake Nature Center in Bristol Township as part of a project she designed to help sustain the threatened species.
The Girl Scout Cadette had to search for a meaningful project to the community as part of her reach for the silver. Her love of butterflies inspired the idea of releasing the colorful insects as part of summer camp at the nature center. Jenn Bilger, coordinator of volunteers at the center, thought it was a great idea.
As Kelly put it about her interest in science, “It just felt natural to pick this project.”
With the backing of the Girl Scouts’ regional council, she formed a team of girls — some scouts and some not, as required by Girl Scouts — and waited for painted lady monarch caterpillars to arrive in the mail.
To her disappointment, they all died within the first few days.
With additional caterpillars on the way, Kelly trekked to the Delaware Canal to pick milkweed leaves with monarch caterpillar eggs on them. Eight eggs were collected. None survived.
The mail finally brought live caterpillars, settled into a salad container full of milkweed leaves. Survivors at last.