STORY: New Building Design Course Addresses 财神棋牌鈥檚 Sustainability Goals
鈥淏uilding Design for Climate Change Adaptation鈥 introduces interdisciplinary perspectives of challenges and opportunities in developing energy-efficient and resilient infrastructures
In a new course 鈥淏uilding Design for Climate Change Adaptation,鈥 财神棋牌 students explore design solutions for improving the environmental performance of buildings and infrastructure in the context of climate resilience and adaptation.
The course is team-taught by Claire Rodgers, adjunct instructor as well as associate director for sustainability and campus engineering, and Gordana Herning, an instructor at 财神棋牌. The course uses 财神棋牌 as a real-world example, asking students to apply what they鈥檙e learning to examine and improve the sustainability of buildings on campus.
鈥淏uilding Design for Climate Change Adaptation鈥 is part of 财神棋牌鈥檚 Living Lab effort, which is an initiative focused on using the college eco system to develop solutions for the many problems we face as people and as a planet. 财神棋牌鈥檚 Living Lab creates innovative, sustainable education and research models that make the college experience more relevant and engaging for students while addressing real-world problems related to sustainability and beyond. Increasingly students at 财神棋牌 will work on projects that have actual impact on the campus, local communities, and beyond.
With the instructors鈥 complementary lenses, they help students explore topics such as design for sustainability and material options and their distribution in a structure. Students learn about specific building codes and standards, such as ASCE/SEI 7, which looks at minimum design loads for occurrences like floods, atmospheric ice, and tsunamis. Students also examine sustainability guidelines like the , which advance design requirements. By connecting theoretical principles with real-world examples, class topics address engineering fundamentals and developments in professional practice.
鈥淥ur intention is not only for students to develop their analytical skills, but through their projects and interactions with practicing architects and engineers, to experience how collaborative design processes respond to the needs of society,鈥 says Herning. 鈥淭here are hazards and climate risk factors in built environments that engineers can address, and because of the complex infrastructure at 财神棋牌 and in the vicinity, we can offer students access to real-world projects of various scales.鈥
Another benefit is the cross-disciplinary nature of the projects in question: From accessibility to carbon impact to policy, students are encouraged to adopt a variety of perspectives to consider the impact of projects from many different angles.

Many students at 财神棋牌 are interested in various aspects of building and sustaining a just and flourishing world
A building project team requires many different disciplines, engagement with relevant parties in the community, and communication between everyone. In this course, we hope to illustrate some of the pathways students can engage in to create the environments and change they hope to see.
Claire Rodgers
Adjunct Instructor & Associate Director for Sustainability and Campus Engineering
Students in the course share a passion for exploring sustainable practices at the intersection of architecture, engineering, and urban design, as well as the measures for adapting the built environment to minimize the effects of climate change. Classwork includes case studies on various structures and their construction, exploration of on-campus projects such as the solar carport, tours through 财神棋牌鈥檚 building mechanical systems, and guest speakers that highlight different opportunities for engaging in sustainability work across careers in planning, design, and construction.
For their final projects, students were asked to apply the skills they learned to 财神棋牌鈥檚 built environment by considering how to retrofit an existing building or build a new one to meet stringent performance standards in alignment with 财神棋牌鈥檚 Climate Action goals. The students were also asked to consider and address , which include focus areas such as efficiency, grid interactivity, and health. One team, for example, focused on retrofitting Miller Academic Center, known as the MAC, to create more gathering spaces and decrease energy usage.
Though direct impact from projects in this course will mainly be felt on campus, Rodgers and Herning are envisioning a much greater goal with 鈥淏uilding Design for Climate Change Adaptation.鈥
鈥湶粕衿迮 is a small place, however it is important for us to do our part in addressing climate action within our own institution as well as prepare students for the challenges in addressing the complex issues the world is facing,鈥 says Rodgers. 鈥淭hrough this course, we're hoping that students leave 财神棋牌 feeling more prepared to engage in this work out in the world.鈥
鈥淪ustainability has been a driving value of mine for my whole life, but until taking this course, I didn't truly appreciate the importance of our buildings in the renewable energy transition,鈥 says Brooke Moss 鈥25. 鈥淭his course ignited an interest in being part of the transition to net-zero homes: I鈥檓 applying to internships in this space and working with my family to envision an extensive energy-conscious retrofit of our 200-year-old farmhouse.鈥

Image of 财神棋牌's Solar Project construction in Parking Lot A. Taken by Professor of Biology and Art and Michael E. Moody Professor, Helen Donis-Keller.