Overall Rating | Gold - expired |
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Overall Score | 67.44 |
Liaison | Andrea Trimble |
Submission Date | March 4, 2021 |
University of Virginia
AC-8: Campus as a Living Laboratory
Status | Score | Responsible Party |
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4.00 / 4.00 |
Andrea
Trimble Director - Office for Sustainability Office for Sustainability |
Campus Engagement
A brief description of the projects and how they contribute to understanding or advancing sustainability in relation to Campus Engagement:
Since Spring 2019, a Sustainability Leadership class has been offered, an experiential, workshop-based course, in which students develop leadership skills in translating ideas into action, using UVA's Grounds for engaged learning – the campus as a sustainability classroom. Students gain insight into a process in which individuals can catalyze change to solve global problems and advance strategic goals on a local level though a place-based, project-based, and human-centered approach. All projects are implemented on Grounds and many focus on peer to peer student outreach initiatives across topic areas.
Public Engagement
A brief description of the projects and how they contribute to understanding or advancing sustainability in relation to Public Engagement:
Air & Climate
A brief description of the projects and how they contribute to understanding or advancing sustainability in relation to Air & Climate:
Additionally, student represenatives participate in the UVA + William and Mary Carbon Neutrality 2030 partnership committees, in which stakeholders work together on climate solutions at each university.
Buildings
A brief description of the projects and how they contribute to understanding or advancing sustainability in relation to Buildings:
Both graduate and undergraduate students participate in a variety of research and educational opportunities in the Link Lab, which enables students to connect academics and research to hands-on learning about the built environment.The Smart Cities component of the Link Lab focuses on technology to make urban and rural areas safer, more resilient, and more efficient.
https://engineering.virginia.edu/link-lab/research/smart-cities-0
Energy
A brief description of the projects and how they contribute to understanding or advancing sustainability in relation to Energy:
Food & Dining
A brief description of the projects and how they contribute to understanding or advancing sustainability in relation to Food & Dining:
Tremendous UVA student, community, and faculty support resulted in the footprint of today’s garden. Soon after came the establishment of the CSA and student research projects. Students began developing marketing strategies for garden development. Morven Summer Institute Faculty began incorporating the garden as a learning tool for the classroom. Student leadership continues to the the key for the vision and growth of the Morven Kitchen Garden.
The Morven Kitchen Garden's goal is that all students involved in the Morven Kitchen Garden would have the opportunity to learn, lead, and connect through sustainably growing food.
Learn – Educational garden opportunities include semester and summer internships, weekly workdays, class visits, student academic projects, and seasonal events.
Lead – MKG Exec, the garden’s student leadership team advises, promotes, and connects the garden to Grounds. Volunteer workdays are led by MKG Exec and garden interns.
Connect – Opportunities to directly engage with the garden, the local food system, and greater Charlottesville Community include garden tours, our CSA program, and events like Gazpacho in the Garden.
Additionally, Green Dining Working Group, under the Environmental Stewardship Subcommittee is comprised of students, faculty, and staff was established to facilitate work in on-grounds projects. Students also have the opportunity to volunteer in a garden on Grounds, located on the corner of McCormick and Alderman Roads.
Grounds
A brief description of the projects and how they contribute to understanding or advancing sustainability in relation to Grounds:
In fall 2019 Professor Barbara Brown Wilson’s Toward the Resilient City class (Urban + Environmental Planning - School of Architecture) partnered with the Office for Sustainability to support students in semester-long group projects to explore how course concepts could be applied on Grounds.
Through case studies and research, students from 16 different degree programs examined what makes a city resilient and then enhanced their learning through application of the International Living Future Institute’s Living Community Challenge. In small groups students developed a pitch via posters and videos for a strategy to each implement one concept embodied in a “petal” from the Living Community Challenge on Grounds. Projects included proposals to address equity in UVA’s restrooms, transforming UVA’s heating system, reimagining the role of bikes on Grounds, a net positive water system, and a tool to incentivize wellness programs amongst students.
Graduating Master of Landscape Architecture Student Andrew Spears received a $2500 Sustainability Green Initiative Funding Tomorrow (GIFT) grant to build a solar-powered wood kiln at the O’Hill yard. The kiln will be used to dry wood from dead or dying trees on Grounds that has been locally milled. The wood will used for student projects in the School of Architecture and elsewhere.
Purchasing
A brief description of the projects and how they contribute to understanding or advancing sustainability in relation to Purchasing:
Formed in 2004 by planning and architecture students to address green design at the University, the group sponsors projects that encompass a range of sustainable design ideas – from green roofs to energy use to transportation. Through each project, Green Grounds works with a diverse set of university stakeholders including administrators, staff, faculty, students and community members.
Holding a strong conviction that the University of Virginia can and should employ sustainable practices as part of their growth strategy, the Green Grounds Group promotes a broad range of projects from minimization of energy consumption to selection of low environmental impact materials to site and building water management to improved indoor air quality.
Although this organization has members who are University of Virginia students and may have University employees associated or engaged in its activities and affairs, the organization is not a part of or an agency of the University. It is a separate and independent organization that is responsible for and manages its own activities and affairs. The University does not direct, supervise or control the organization and is not responsible for the organization’s contracts, acts or omissions.
This information is quoted from: https://atuva.student.virginia.edu/organization/greengroundsgroup/about
Additionally, the Procurement Working Group, under the Environmental Stewardship Subcommittee, partners students with faculty and staff and in 2016 the group developed zero waste criteria for caterer and held training for staff purchasers.
Transportation
A brief description of the projects and how they contribute to understanding or advancing sustainability in relation to Transportation:
Waste
A brief description of the projects and how they contribute to understanding or advancing sustainability in relation to Waste:
In 2018, Facilities Management and the Office for Sustainability partnered with the School of Engineering's Solid Waste Management course. Students conducted waste audits and developed recommendations to inform UVA's waste action plan.
https://news.virginia.edu/content/students-dumpster-dive-contribute-uva-trash-action-plan
In April 2020, School of Engineering AMP in Systems Engineering students worked with Facilities Management on a team capstone project to identify possible system-level strategies for achieving UVA’s solid waste goal of reducing the solid waste tonnage to 30% of the 2010 tonnage by 2030, a “large scale problem of major significance to UVA.” Students used engineering and business analytical skills to propose solutions to this strategic goal. The program was created by senior faculty at the University of Virginia’s School of Engineering and Applied Science in collaboration with the Darden Graduate School of Business Administration.
Water
A brief description of the projects and how they contribute to understanding or advancing sustainability in relation to Water:
Coordination & Planning
A brief description of the projects and how they contribute to understanding or advancing sustainability in relation to Coordination & Planning:
1. Connection to University: Project directly addresses environmental sustainability on the University of Virginia Grounds or in the capacity that on-Grounds activities directly influence environmental sustainability in the surrounding community.
2. University Affiliation: Project proposal is submitted by a UVA student, staff member, and/or faculty member on behalf of an individual or UVA program, organization, office, or department. Non-university affiliated Individuals and organizations may not submit proposals.
3. Innovation: Project is innovative in nature and does not include routine maintenance or code-compliant activities. Fund may support the gap between code-compliant and more sustainable alternatives.
4. Feasibility and Institutional Support: Project is feasible and has support from appropriate University individuals and entities. Individual students or student organizations must have the signature of a faculty or staff advisor who is committed to advising throughout project implementation.
5. Appropriateness of Schedule and Budget Request
6. Cost/Benefit Analysis (as applicable): Project proposal outlines project payback, lifecycle costs and savings, etc.
7. Environmental Benefits: Project demonstrates a reduction in UVA’s carbon footprint or provides other environmental benefits such as water conservation, storm water management, biodiversity conservation, waste minimization, etc.
8. Student Experience: Project includes opportunities for student involvement and/or will positively impact the student experience.
9. Outreach and Education: Project considers education and outreach opportunities and has included them as part of its implementation plan.
Additionally, students are an integral part of the University Committee on Sustainability, which is the highest-level sustainability committee at UVA and which reports to all three Executive Vice Presidents.
Diversity & Affordability
A brief description of the projects and how they contribute to understanding or advancing sustainability in relation to Diversity & Affordability:
Investment & Finance
A brief description of the projects and how they contribute to understanding or advancing sustainability in relation to Investment & Finance:
Additionally, the Committee on Sustainability includes a Responsible Investments working group of students, faculty, and staff.
Wellbeing & Work
A brief description of the projects and how they contribute to understanding or advancing sustainability in relation to Wellbeing & Work:
People tend to overestimate certain unhealthy behaviors. One reason is that many of these behaviors are visible and they draw our attention, like people smoking or a person passed out at a party. One survey showed 68% of U.Va. students overestimated the number of drinks per week that most U.Va. students consume.
Likewise, people tend to underestimate certain healthy behaviors because they are largely invisible or “part of the pattern.” Studying, prayer and using a condom are all examples of this. 32% of U.Va. students didn’t realize that most U.Va. students, while drinking alcohol, make their own drinks or watch their drinks being made.
Overestimating unhealthy behaviors and underestimating healthy behaviors can create internal pressure to behave a certain way. By correcting misperceptions like these and focusing on the accurate ‘norm,’ students have space to act on their own values."
Through the SSJ and other programs such as the Peer Health Educators, the University has engaged in educating its students on the importance of understanding Health and Wellbeing. Moreover, these initiatives have helped students engage in ways that the University can better serve its students and other faculty/staff.
https://www.studenthealth.virginia.edu/stall-seat-journal
Optional Fields
Additional documentation to support the submission:
Data source(s) and notes about the submission:
https://sustainability.virginia.edu/about-us/committee-sustainability/environmental-stewardship-subcommittee
Since Fall 2009, over 1,350 students in the Global Sustainability foundation course have completed Think Global/Act Local Projects. Each semester student teams collaborate with diverse community partners to implement meaningful research service learning projects on Grounds and in the community.
Since Spring 2019, a Sustainability Leadership class has been offered, an experiential, workshop-based course, in which students develop leadership skills in translating ideas into action, using UVA's Grounds for engaged learning – the campus as a sustainability classroom. Students gain insight into a process in which individuals can catalyze change to solve global problems and advance strategic goals on a local level though a place-based, project-based, and human-centered approach.
As an extension to the Global Sustainability course, students develop their own project idea and work with UVA's Office for Sustainability and other UVA stakeholders to refine and implement a project pilot that addresses environmental challenges. A goal of the course is for each student to implement a pilot project that could potentially replicated on a larger scale in the future, while developing change management and project management skills.
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