TSI Implements Sustainability Program
May 11, 2010 3:17 PM
http://clubindustry.com/forprofits/tsi-ecosteps-20100511/
NEW YORK -- Town Sports International Holdings Inc. (TSI) has launched at all of its facilities an EcoSteps initiative, a fully integrated sustainability program, the company announced.
“A healthy planet means healthy living for all of us, which is why we’ve made a company-wide commitment to lessening TSI’s impact on the environment,” COO Martin Annese says. “EcoSteps is a natural extension of our company’s mission to improve health and fitness. More efficient, more environmentally sustainable clubs will give our members better opportunities to work toward both a healthier body and planet.”
TSI aims to reduce energy usage by 20 percent, water usage by 5 percent and recyclable waste by 75 percent during the next three years. This long-term program, which TSI will be working on closely with community leaders and sustainability experts, will educate employees and members about how they can participate to help achieve these goals.
Annese continued, “The plan has been 24 months in the making and takes a holistic look at our entire operation to figure out how to not just “go green” but also how to become more efficient in the process.”
TSI has established a Sustainability Steering Committee reporting directly to Annese.
Additionally, TSI has instituted energy management systems at more than 60 clubs throughout the 158-club network in the United States. It has completed lighting retro-fit projects at 20 clubs, with an additional 30 clubs under way. One hundred of TSI’s clubs and its six regional corporate offices have recycling programs.
The company also is participating in the EPA’s Climate Leaders program with five-year greenhouse gas emission reduction goals pending. In addition, TSI uses the Green Revolution, power-generating exercise equipment, and it has an 80-kilowatt photovoltaic solar platform at its Elmsford corporate office as part of a renewable energy pilot program.
Friday, May 21, 2010
Tuesday, May 4, 2010
Water wars
The big battle in the future will be over water. One of the biggest users of water are sport fields. In our effort to have the greenest fields possible we sometimes- no normally- over water grass. Grass normally does not need a lot of water from the end of August until the beginning of April. However, many lawns/fields are still water extensively at times when the grass no longer needs as much water. By knowing when the grass should be watered, a facility could possibly save a lot on their water bills and save water! A recent survey showed that hospitals use 7% of their water usage for irrigation. Hotels/Motels used 16%, and schools used 28% of all their water for irrigation. The primary usage for schools are their fields.
National standard
Would we be more inclined to pursue sustainable solutions if we had a national law/standard for recycling? A recent article highlighted the recycling programs underway in Nova Scotia. Organic materials are collected by the municipality and sold to landscapers for use on grounds, golf courses, etc... Every bottle has a 10 cent deposit with 50% being returned to the municipality to cover composting costs. Yard waste is collected in green bin and 20 bags of leaves are collected twice a year. To encourage recycling, the government allows free recycling at municipal facilities. All "old" style dumps are now closed and any new landfills use a bathtub style waste repositories, and new treatment strategies.
Maybe if our government was willing to take some risks and make some hard laws with stiff penalties we might be able to launch some more aggressive disposal/recycling initiatives.
Maybe if our government was willing to take some risks and make some hard laws with stiff penalties we might be able to launch some more aggressive disposal/recycling initiatives.
Wednesday, April 21, 2010
Give me data
The U.S. Green Building Council in 2009 announced that as a pre-condition to LEED certification, new projects will need to provide data concerning energy and water usage. This is designed to address a disconnect between what is designed by architects and engineers- versus what really is going on. Thus, performance information can be compared with actual results. Thus, if a builder claims that a certain amount of energy will be saved by a given fixture, the data will need to be collected to prove accuracy of the claim(s). One of the key benefits to this data will be benchmarking for future facilities to determine what the real results are for various green construction/facility management efforts.
One of the future trends we will see grow over the next couple years are smart meters. besides tracking critical data, these meters can control energy usage. Thus, if peak electrical costs occur at a given time, a smart meter might let the temperature in a building increase one or two degrees during that time to minimize electrical usage then and to save more money. In the future these systems will control all electrical and heating/air conditioning system to dramatically save money.
One of the future trends we will see grow over the next couple years are smart meters. besides tracking critical data, these meters can control energy usage. Thus, if peak electrical costs occur at a given time, a smart meter might let the temperature in a building increase one or two degrees during that time to minimize electrical usage then and to save more money. In the future these systems will control all electrical and heating/air conditioning system to dramatically save money.
Safeco Field Green Efforts
Safeco Field getting greener as more garbage composted
In the first three ballgames at Safeco Field this year, 70 percent of the service ware — cups, plates, even eating utensils — used by Mariners fans and employees was recycled or composted.
By Susan Gilmore
Seattle Times staff reporter
PREV of NEXT
MARK HARRISON / THE SEATTLE TIMES
Pam Moore drops finished bottles into the recycling bin at Safeco Field, where the Mariners are ahead of the game on meeting Seattle's new recycling/composting law.
In the first three ballgames at Safeco Field this year, 70 percent of the service ware — cups, plates, even eating utensils — used by Mariners fans and employees was recycled or composted.
That's a huge increase from last year, when 38 percent didn't go to a landfill.
Seattle Mariners spokeswoman Rebecca Hale said the emphasis on keeping food-serving-and-eating items out of the trash will save the team about $100,000 a year in landfill fees; last year, the team saved $60,000.
Beginning July 1, Seattle will become the first city in the nation where all single-use service ware must be either compostable or recyclable. That means Seattle will stop sending 6,000 tons of plastic and plastic-coated paper products to a landfill, or 225 shipping containers of waste.
While the law doesn't go into effect until July 1, the Mariners decided to start now with the beginning of its season.
There are just 17 garbage cans at Safeco Field, said Scott Jenkins, vice president of ballpark operations. All the others have been replaced with 300 compost containers and 200 recycling bins.
The Mariners have contracted with Cedar Grove Composting to handle the waste. Plastic bottles make up the largest single number of recyclable items at Safeco, Hale said. Beer "glasses" and the cardboard packaging for bobbleheads are plentiful, too.
At Safeco, crews sift through the garbage to pull out plastic bottles. Almost everything else is compostable. Even the plastic beer glasses and eating utensils can be composted. Jenkins said virtually all that's left as garbage are potato-chip bags, wrappers for licorice ropes and tiny condiment containers.
The key to success, said Jenkins, is educating the fans, who want to throw away their beer glasses and plates.
"We're early in the learning curve, but are doing really well," he said.
He envisions a 70 percent compost and recycling rate this year, and it could even get as high as 85 percent.
Dick Lilly, with Seattle Public Utilities, said the July 1 change is part of a package of laws passed by the Seattle City Council, that included a ban on Styrofoam packaging and the failed effort to put a fee on plastic and paper bags.
He said the packaging industry has stepped up to the challenge; there were 70 food-service products that could be recycled or composted two years ago and now there are 600 approved by Cedar Grove.
"As this thing rolls out, restaurants need to do a lot of customer education," said Lilly.
He admitted that this could mean higher costs to the restaurant, but he doesn't think they will be noticed by customers.
Josh McDonald, a state and local government affairs spokesman with the Washington Restaurant Association, said his group is concerned about the costs. "Some (pieces) will be close to even, and some will be 100 times more per piece. When you add it up, that means increased costs."
He acknowledged that Seattle will be one of the few places in the country with such a broad edict. "Because we're the only place in the country to have these requirements, the packaging is still thought boutique and with it will carry a boutique price tag."
McDonald said restaurants operate on a 4.5 percent profit margin and 11,000 jobs were lost in the last quarter because of the economy, so there is a concern about the extra costs that will be generated by the new packaging rules. He didn't know whether the costs would be passed on to the customers or simply absorbed.
Lilly said the average restaurant can save $200 to $400 a month just by composting kitchen food waste.
He said the new ordinance can bring a $250-a-day fine, but the city doesn't plan to impose it, particularly at the beginning when education is needed.
"As long as we know a restaurant chain is making an effort and talking to us, we're usually OK with that," he said.
Hale, with the Mariners, said it will take a little more manpower at the stadium to sort through the recyclable containers, but she believes it's worth the effort if it saves money. She said the hard part will be teaching fans from out of town. Half of the fans come from outside King County.
"For them, it's new and mysterious and they may default to the garbage, even if we put a recycling bin next to it," Hale said.
In 2005, recycling at Safeco was at 12 percent of the waste. In 2006, it rose to 18 percent, then 25 percent in 2007, 31 percent in 2008 and 38 percent in 2009.
Susan Gilmore: 206-464-2054 or sgilmore@seattletimes.com
In the first three ballgames at Safeco Field this year, 70 percent of the service ware — cups, plates, even eating utensils — used by Mariners fans and employees was recycled or composted.
By Susan Gilmore
Seattle Times staff reporter
PREV of NEXT
MARK HARRISON / THE SEATTLE TIMES
Pam Moore drops finished bottles into the recycling bin at Safeco Field, where the Mariners are ahead of the game on meeting Seattle's new recycling/composting law.
In the first three ballgames at Safeco Field this year, 70 percent of the service ware — cups, plates, even eating utensils — used by Mariners fans and employees was recycled or composted.
That's a huge increase from last year, when 38 percent didn't go to a landfill.
Seattle Mariners spokeswoman Rebecca Hale said the emphasis on keeping food-serving-and-eating items out of the trash will save the team about $100,000 a year in landfill fees; last year, the team saved $60,000.
Beginning July 1, Seattle will become the first city in the nation where all single-use service ware must be either compostable or recyclable. That means Seattle will stop sending 6,000 tons of plastic and plastic-coated paper products to a landfill, or 225 shipping containers of waste.
While the law doesn't go into effect until July 1, the Mariners decided to start now with the beginning of its season.
There are just 17 garbage cans at Safeco Field, said Scott Jenkins, vice president of ballpark operations. All the others have been replaced with 300 compost containers and 200 recycling bins.
The Mariners have contracted with Cedar Grove Composting to handle the waste. Plastic bottles make up the largest single number of recyclable items at Safeco, Hale said. Beer "glasses" and the cardboard packaging for bobbleheads are plentiful, too.
At Safeco, crews sift through the garbage to pull out plastic bottles. Almost everything else is compostable. Even the plastic beer glasses and eating utensils can be composted. Jenkins said virtually all that's left as garbage are potato-chip bags, wrappers for licorice ropes and tiny condiment containers.
The key to success, said Jenkins, is educating the fans, who want to throw away their beer glasses and plates.
"We're early in the learning curve, but are doing really well," he said.
He envisions a 70 percent compost and recycling rate this year, and it could even get as high as 85 percent.
Dick Lilly, with Seattle Public Utilities, said the July 1 change is part of a package of laws passed by the Seattle City Council, that included a ban on Styrofoam packaging and the failed effort to put a fee on plastic and paper bags.
He said the packaging industry has stepped up to the challenge; there were 70 food-service products that could be recycled or composted two years ago and now there are 600 approved by Cedar Grove.
"As this thing rolls out, restaurants need to do a lot of customer education," said Lilly.
He admitted that this could mean higher costs to the restaurant, but he doesn't think they will be noticed by customers.
Josh McDonald, a state and local government affairs spokesman with the Washington Restaurant Association, said his group is concerned about the costs. "Some (pieces) will be close to even, and some will be 100 times more per piece. When you add it up, that means increased costs."
He acknowledged that Seattle will be one of the few places in the country with such a broad edict. "Because we're the only place in the country to have these requirements, the packaging is still thought boutique and with it will carry a boutique price tag."
McDonald said restaurants operate on a 4.5 percent profit margin and 11,000 jobs were lost in the last quarter because of the economy, so there is a concern about the extra costs that will be generated by the new packaging rules. He didn't know whether the costs would be passed on to the customers or simply absorbed.
Lilly said the average restaurant can save $200 to $400 a month just by composting kitchen food waste.
He said the new ordinance can bring a $250-a-day fine, but the city doesn't plan to impose it, particularly at the beginning when education is needed.
"As long as we know a restaurant chain is making an effort and talking to us, we're usually OK with that," he said.
Hale, with the Mariners, said it will take a little more manpower at the stadium to sort through the recyclable containers, but she believes it's worth the effort if it saves money. She said the hard part will be teaching fans from out of town. Half of the fans come from outside King County.
"For them, it's new and mysterious and they may default to the garbage, even if we put a recycling bin next to it," Hale said.
In 2005, recycling at Safeco was at 12 percent of the waste. In 2006, it rose to 18 percent, then 25 percent in 2007, 31 percent in 2008 and 38 percent in 2009.
Susan Gilmore: 206-464-2054 or sgilmore@seattletimes.com
Thursday, April 15, 2010
Southern Cal growing solar
Southern California Edison is expected to install roof-top solar collectors on numerous (100-125 warehouses) roof tops to develop almost 1.5 sqaure miles of roof-tops. The energy from thsi installation is expected to produce enough electircal energy to power 162,000 homes.
Portland LEED
From the April 15, 2010 IAAM newsletter.
In conjunction with NBA Green Week, a league-wide sustainability awareness initiative from April 1-9, the Portland Trail Blazers commemorated the Rose Garden’s LEED Gold certification with a LEED plaque unveiling ceremony on April 9 at the Rose Garden’s North entrance.
NBA Deputy Commissioner Adam Silver joined Trail Blazers President Larry Miller, Senior Scientist Allen Hershkowitz of the National Resources Defense Council (NRDC) and a representative of the U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC) to officially recognize the Trail Blazers becoming the first major pro sports team to earn a coveted LEED Gold rating from the USGBC.
“We are proud of this achievement, not only for the progress it represents for our organization, but because it reinforces Portland’s leadership as America’s greenest city,” Miller said. “We see this as an ongoing commitment to sustainability throughout our operations, not just a one-time event. By doing that, we hope to encourage visitors to the Rose Quarter to think and act more responsibly to reduce their own impact on the environment.”
Throughout Green Week, adidas outfitted all 30 NBA teams with 50 percent organic polyester shooting shirts featuring the NBA Green logo. Players also wore NBA Green headbands, wristbands and socks made from 45 percent organic cotton to further promote greater environmental awareness.
“Green Week showcases the NBA’s ability to inspire positive action and is another example of why the league has an outstanding reputation as one of the world’s most responsible sports organizations,” Hershkowitz said. “A healthy environment benefits everyone, and the NBA's continued incorporation of that understanding into its operations proves it takes its commitment to environmental protection seriously.”
In conjunction with NBA Green Week, a league-wide sustainability awareness initiative from April 1-9, the Portland Trail Blazers commemorated the Rose Garden’s LEED Gold certification with a LEED plaque unveiling ceremony on April 9 at the Rose Garden’s North entrance.
NBA Deputy Commissioner Adam Silver joined Trail Blazers President Larry Miller, Senior Scientist Allen Hershkowitz of the National Resources Defense Council (NRDC) and a representative of the U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC) to officially recognize the Trail Blazers becoming the first major pro sports team to earn a coveted LEED Gold rating from the USGBC.
“We are proud of this achievement, not only for the progress it represents for our organization, but because it reinforces Portland’s leadership as America’s greenest city,” Miller said. “We see this as an ongoing commitment to sustainability throughout our operations, not just a one-time event. By doing that, we hope to encourage visitors to the Rose Quarter to think and act more responsibly to reduce their own impact on the environment.”
Throughout Green Week, adidas outfitted all 30 NBA teams with 50 percent organic polyester shooting shirts featuring the NBA Green logo. Players also wore NBA Green headbands, wristbands and socks made from 45 percent organic cotton to further promote greater environmental awareness.
“Green Week showcases the NBA’s ability to inspire positive action and is another example of why the league has an outstanding reputation as one of the world’s most responsible sports organizations,” Hershkowitz said. “A healthy environment benefits everyone, and the NBA's continued incorporation of that understanding into its operations proves it takes its commitment to environmental protection seriously.”
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