California District Plans Nine LEED Gold Projects
Montgomery Middle School
CHULA VISTA, Calif. — While construction has slowed for some districts, the Sweetwater Union High School district is working on nine projects designed to meet LEED Gold certification.
“Sweetwater Union is the only district west of Ohio that his nine LEED Gold construction projects and one LEED Platinum project in design,” says Jaime Ortiz, a program manager for Proposition O and for SGI Construction Management.
The new Montgomery Middle School will exceed state energy efficiency standards by almost 40 percent, providing ongoing district savings in the form of lower energy cost, according to reports. Key green features include a rooftop solar photovoltaic system designed to provide 80 percent of the electricity for the school campus.
Additionally, designers incorporated a number of environmentally friendly finish materials, carpeting with recycled content, linoleum flooring made of rapidly renewable resources, and low-emitting adhesives, paints, and finish coatings.
Once complete, the school will have plenty of shaded outdoor spaces, allowing teachers to easily take their classes outside. In addition, indoor architectural spaces will allow for academic displays, allowing teachers and students to connect what they learn in the classroom to what they see in the hallways and corridors.
Each classroom will be equipped with a CO2 sensor, which will monitor the amount of oxygen in each room and adjust air circulation as needed. If teachers and students are not receiving the appropriate amount of oxygen, the sensors will automatically start HVAC systems to allow more fresh air into the room.
Gilbane, Inc. and SGI Construction Management are the project managers for the Montgomery Middle School replacement project. LPA Inc. of Irvine, Calif., is providing architectural and engineering services for the project.
Funds from Proposition O will go toward upgrading a total of 35 middle, high, and adult schools in the Sweetwater Union High School District, providing much-needed improvements to facilities used by 43,000 middle and high school students and 27,000 adult learners district wide.