News: Tech companies going green; Study reveals power of PV during peak demand; Levitating house could protect against earthquakes;

> Tech companies going green: "In a growing trend, Facebook and Microsoft have announced new purchases of wind power for data centres. They join Google in choosing wind for the power-hungry facilities, which house IT equipment for computing, networking and data storage, as well as infrastructure for electricity and cooling."

Image: nyc.gov

> World’s Largest Landfill Will Soon Be NYC’s Biggest Solar Plant: "New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg announced that Freshkills Park on Staten Island, once the world’s largest landfill, will soon be converted into the city’s largest solar energy facility. Once completed, the plant will produce up to 10 megawatts of power — five times more than any solar energy system in the city and enough to power approximately 2,000 homes."

> 10 landscape design projects that turn damaged and neglected spaces into healthy, beautiful environments.

Image: Ron Pollard

> Architectural Record on "Performance Anxiety": "Creating buildings that deliver on progressively more ambitious environmental goals will require energy simulations that reliably predict post-occupancy consumption."

> Rooftop Solar Can Meet 58% Of Peak Power Demand: "A new study by the Pecan Street Research Institute found that residential solar panel systems can cut electricity demand during peak summer hours by 58 percent.

By monitoring 50 single-family homes in Austin, Texas with west- and/or south-facing solar panels from June through August this year, the study found that west-facing solar panels produced 49 percent more electricity during summer peak demand hours than south-facing panels, a finding that should make utilities think twice about excluding west-facing solar panel systems from solar rebate programs. According to the study, west-facing rooftop systems cut peak demand 65 percent, while south-facing systems reduced peak demand 54 percent."

> Startup helps restaurants and groceries turn food waste into fertilizer: "Food waste is a huge issue these days, not just in the home, but also in the food service and grocery industries, with an estimated 40% or more of the food in the U.S. ending up as waste each year – totaling millions of tons of organic matter. And with food production consuming as much as 80% of our freshwater, 50% of our land, and 10% of our energy, that food waste ends up also being water and energy waste as well.

However, one startup, founded by two former Microsoft employees, has a solution to dealing with the vast amounts of unusable food generated in food prep and sales, not necessarily by reducing the amount of waste, but by turning those wasted food scraps into a valuable resource."

Image: Air Danshin, Translated by Spoon & Tamago

Image: Air Danshin, Translated by Spoon & Tamago

> Japanese levitating house system could protect homes from earthquakes: "As fantastical as a home levitation system may seem, Air Danshin claims that the technology is not only effective, but also 1/3 cheaper than many other earthquake-proofing systems out there – and it requires little maintenance. According to Spoon & Tamago, the technology calls for a fairly simple, if powerful, set of mechanisms to be installed around a property. When an earthquake hits, a sensor responds within one second by activating a compressor, which forces an incredible amount of air under the home, pushing the structure up and apart from its foundation. The air pressure can keep the home levitating up to 3cm from the shaking foundation below. An indoor valve controls the flow of air under the house, keeping the structure steady as it 'floats.'"

> A 140 acre forest is about to pop up in Detroit: "The lower east side of Detroit is about to get a make-over. Hantz Woodlands (formerly known as Hantz Farms), has reached a deal with the State of Michigan to purchase 1,500 parcels of non-continuous land for the price of half a million dollars and plant urban forestry in place of blighted and derelict properties that scatter the landscape."

Image: RAND

> What will our future be like if we don’t change how we get around?: "How will Americans get around in the year 2030? A recent report from the RAND Corporation lays out two 'plausible futures' developed though a 'scenario analysis' and vetted by outside experts. While RAND takes a decidedly agnostic stance toward the implications of each scenario, the choice that emerges is still pretty stark."

News: Hurricane Sandy; reuseable materials finds marketplace; 8 years after Katrina; the changing driving habits of Americans

> Hurricane Sandy task force releases report, urges more resilient construction in wake of Hurricane Sandy: "More than ever, it is critical that when we build for the future, we do so in a way that makes communities more resilient to emerging challenges such as rising sea levels, extreme heat, and more frequent and intense storms," the report said.

Image: Alice Waters 

Image: Alice Waters 

 > NPR profiles food activist Alice Waters, pioneer of the locally grown, organic food movement: "We've been separated from this experience through a kind of fast-food indoctrination that's been going on for the last 50 years. So we need to really come back to our senses and really understand, like most every other country in the world, that food is something precious."

> Planet Reuse Marketplace connects homeowners with reuse centers; offers materials that would otherwise have been discarded for use in new construction, renovations, and DIY projects.

>  Beacon Food Forest, Seattle's first urban food forest will be open to foragers: "The idea is to give members of the working-class neighborhood of Beacon Hill the chance to pick plants scattered throughout the park... It will feature fruit-bearing perennials — apples, pears, plums, grapes, blueberries, raspberries and more."

> Eight Years After Katrina: New Orleans recovery still a work in progress.

> American driving levels drop as Millennials turn to public transit: “The idea that the car means freedom, I think, is over,” said travel behavior analyst Nancy McGuckin. "

 Image by Tim Fuller

 Image by Tim Fuller

> Germany breaks monthly solar power generation record, nets 5.1 terawatt hours of power. Inhabitat adds, “The accomplishment proves once again that a lack of sunshine is no obstacle to scaling up solar energy — and if the Teutons can produce record amounts of solar power under grey skies, then the potential for countries with sunnier weather and more land mass (like the United States) is limitless.”

News: Hurricane Sandy recovery; Joplin unveils new recovery projects; Renewable energy myths explored

>New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg unveils plan to protect city from future hurricanes and storm surge: "'This plan is incredibly ambitious,' Bloomberg said in a speech at the Brooklyn Navy Yard, acknowledging that much of the work would extend beyond the end of his term this year. 'This is urgent work, and it must begin now.'"

>Joplin city manager unveils $130 million Community Development Block Grant plan including infrastructure improvements, EPA Complete Green Street Program development, tree planting, and a proposed Green Neighborhood development.

>New information released on Joplin tornado damage: "An investigative team of engineers sent to Joplin found that more than 83 percent of the damage on May 22, 2011, was caused by winds of 135 mph or less, which is equal to the maximum wind speed of an EF-2 tornado."

>West Liberty, Kentucky continues to embrace sustainable disaster recovery after 2012 tornado.

A tornado in Oklahoma, seven miles south of Anadarko, on May 3, 1999. 
Image credit: OAR/ERL/National Severe Storms Laboratory (NSSL)

A tornado in Oklahoma, seven miles south of Anadarko, on May 3, 1999. Image credit: OAR/ERL/National Severe Storms Laboratory (NSSL)

>Listen: Public radio program Science Friday speaks with David Prevatt, a structural engineer at the University of Florida, about how to best approach strengthening buildings located in tornado alley

 >Pictures: Colorado wildfire quickly destroys hundreds of homes; Black Forest fire 100% contained, additional wildfires force evacuations.

>Google X (the internet giant's innovation unit)  working on green energy project that could ""have an important part to play in the future of the world energy production".

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 >Inspiration: 16-year-old develops a new way to turn algae into fuel, wins first place at the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair.

>Greenpeace Africa debunks 6 myths about renewable energy.

>Why you should care about Solar Impulse and renewable energy’s long, long journey: "There’s more to the story than a funky solar-powered craft that looks like “an outsized balsa wood toy airplane”. Solar Impulse’s journey, in many ways, is a microcosm of our nation’s love/hate relationship with renewable energy. We love the promise of clean energy and celebrate the arrival of the latest green gizmos, but we have very little patience for renewable energy strategies that take years, if not decades, to pay off."

>Poll: Americans consider the environment in what they buy: "The survey of more than 1,000 adults found that 52% said they “very consistently,” “often,” or “occasionally” weigh the environmental impact of their purchases. More and more companies are paying attention and reacting to these kinds of considerations among consumers by establishing better environmental practices, said Anne Kelly, director of Business for Innovative Climate and Energy Policy, a project of the corporate sustainability coalition, Ceres."