| AIA
Selects Guemes Island
to Promote Long-term Sustainability
The American Institute
of Architects (AIA) Center for Communities by Design has selected Guemes
Island to receive technical assistance under the Sustainable Design Assessment
Team (SDAT) program in 2006. The collaborative SDAT will bring together
scientists and other professionals from across the country to provide
a roadmap for Guemes Island to improve sustainability practices. For the
island, sustainability means protecting the groundwater supply, increasing
energy independence, protecting wildlife habitat, and addressing ferry
issues of today without reducing the ability of future generations to
meet their needs.
Guemes Island Planning
Advisory Committee (GIPAC) submitted an application to the 2006 SDAT Review
Panel outlining challenges in these areas in anticipation of the future
growth expected here. Other recipients of AIA SDAT assistance include
New Orleans, Syracuse, N.Y., Longview, Wash., Lawrence, Kan., Northeast,
Mich., Northern, Nev., and Hagerstown, Md.
“We’re
thrilled that so much expertise in sustainable living will make recommendations
on the sub-area plan for the island.” said Roz Glasser, member of
the GIPAC.
A team of architects,
planners, hydrologists, and other related professionals will be selected
based on the specific needs of Guemes Island. The SDAT team will work
with GIPAC, community groups, and other local stakeholders like Skagit
County government and the City of Anacortes to help shape Guemes Island’s
strategy for increasing sustainability. In order to provide the most objective
assessment, all of the team members are from outside the particular communities.
The second step in the process is the preliminary visit where SDAT members
will meet with representatives of the various stakeholder groups in an
effort to gauge the needs of the community and the priorities of the people
who live and work there.
The AIA SDAT team
will visit the island to gather information then report their recommendations
to the community. GIPAC will consider these recommendations and the public
response in drafting its sub-area plan.
The SDAT community
assistance program provides the selected communities with six components:
Preliminary/scoping
visit
Three-day visit
from a multidisciplinary team
An assessment report
highlighting the strengths and weaknesses of the community with regards
to sustainability, along with the opportunities and obstacles to change
Consultations after
a three-day visit (typically by phone or email)
A conference call
six months after delivery of the assessment report to review progress
One-day follow-up
evaluation visit a year after the SDAT report is delivered
“The feedback
from planning officials and mayors of communities that have already participated
in the SDAT program has been extremely positive, and more cities are placing
a priority on environmental sustainability and community revitalization,”
said David T. Downey, Assoc. AIA, managing director of the AIA Center
for Communities by Design. “The forward-looking program is intended
to help address challenges that communities face, such as transportation
design strategies, air and water quality improvement possibilities, local
economic development and how to manage growth associated with increasing
and shifting populations.”
To learn more about
this program, download the SDAT
information packet.
About The
American Institute of Architects
For almost 150 years,
members of The American Institute of Architects have worked with each
other and their communities to create more valuable, healthy, secure,
and sustainable buildings and cityscapes. AIA members have access to the
right people, knowledge, and tools to create better design, and through
such resources and access, they help clients and communities make their
visions real. www.aia.org
For further information
contact Roz
Glasser at (360) 588-0160 or rozglasser@juno.com.
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