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Written by Murray Cook
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Wednesday, 21 January 2009 17:22 |
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(Editor's Note: Murray Cook joins Green Sports Venues as a regular columnist. As someone working daily in the field, Murray has a unique view of how sports facilities can be made more green. If you have any questions for him, send them to
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.)
This feature is the first in a series that I hope will generate some feedback into how we can do a better job taking care of Mother Earth. We all live in the same world, and as sports-facility and athletic-field managers we have a responsibility to do our part in the fight to improve the planet we live in, by being friendlier to the environment. If you haven’t heard, Mother Nature is telling us that she’s sick of how we are treating her -- it’s time for everyone to step up to the plate!
Over the past couple of years I have been working with the Beijing Olympics and spending quite a bit of time in Asia. My travels took me there 17 times in that two-year span, and the question I was asked most often about the Olympics was: “How is the pollution over there?” My response changed between 8-08-2007 and 8-08-08. In the summer of 2007 I spent most of my time there preparing for the Baseball Test event at the Wukesong Sportplex. I actually saw the sun burn through the pollution about four times in the month of August. At the end of the day I would head to the hotel and literally wash black soot off of my face (never mind what was lodged in my nasal cavity.) The level of the pollution was alarming, but one year later the government had made vast changes to the way people lived and worked in Beijing, resultong in better air quality. For instance, a new policy instituted alternating days for personal car travel based on the odd/even numbers on license plates. The government also reduced factory construction by 30 percent and planted over a million trees throughout the sports venues.
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Written by Kevin Reichard
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Friday, 17 October 2008 11:56 |
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The Dallas Cowboys may not be seeking LEED certification for the team's new stadium, but they're taking steps to establish green cred by by applying for membership in the the Environmental Protection Agency's National Environmental Performance Track program. If accepted, the Cowboys stadium would be the first sports facility to be part of the program.
Though the Cowboys and architect HKS did not design the new stadium to LEED standards, they did include many environmentally advanced features in the $1.1 billion facility, slated to open for the 2009 NFL season.
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