News Staff - February 1, 2021 - 5.1K views - 0 Comments - 0 Likes - 0 Reviews
RANCHO MIRAGE, Calif. – The Annenberg Foundation Trust is pleased to announce that its 17-acre employee campus, including administration, archives, and operations buildings, has been awarded LEED® Platinum certification, the U.S. Green Business Council’s highest rating for sustainable design.
LEED, or Leadership in Energy & Environmental Design, is a globally recognized standard of green building excellence. LEED projects earn certification points by adhering to requirements and credits that promote healthier environments, the efficient use of electricity, and lower carbon emissions.
“LEED certification demonstrates tremendous green building leadership,” said Mahesh Ramanujam, the U.S. Green Business Council’s president and chief executive officer. “LEED was created to make the world a better place and revolutionize our buildings and communities by providing everyone with access to healthy, green, and high-performing buildings.”
The campus, completed in 2017, is the second new-construction project at the site of the former Annenberg estate in Rancho Mirage, Calif., to achieve a high standard of LEED certification. The Center & Gardens, the 17,000-square-foot visitor center and 9-acre desert garden that serves as the public access point to the estate earned LEED Gold certification in 2011.
“Implementing environmentally responsible practices is a core value,” said David J. Lane, president of the Sunnylands trust. “It’s rewarding to see our construction efforts recognized with a LEED Platinum rating.”
Lance O'Donnell, the head of o2 Architects, the Palm Springs firm that designed the campus said his team had its eye on a LEED Platinum rating from the start. "My team geared every aspect of design towards that goal, from building orientation to material sourcing, to water reclamation," he said.
Noting Sunnylands’ location in the Colorado Desert, Lauren Hackney, senior associate at CMG Landscape Architecture, the project’s landscape design firm, said the campus “supports Sunnylands' commitment to embodying the best practices for conservation of cultural, historical, and ecological resources in the most challenging of environments."
Highlights of the campus include:
The campus is the central worksite for approximately 100 people employed by the trust responsible for preserving the historic, 200-acre estate that diplomats and philanthropists Walter and Leonore Annenberg established in 1966.
Throughout the second half of the 20th century, the couple famously hosted U.S. presidents, British royalty, and other world figures at what was then their winter home in the Southern California desert. Today, per the Annenbergs' wishes, the trust uses the estate as a venue for diplomatic meetings, and high-level retreats focused on issues of global concern.
Please credit all photos to: The Annenberg Foundation Trust at Sunnylands
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