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BioPreferred Champions: Sustainable Building and Design Randy Doyle, Fort Hood (Part 2)

BioPreferred Champions: Sustainable Building and Design Randy Doyle, Fort Hood (Part 2). 2009 GSA International Products and Services Expo. Sustainable Solutions The Fort Hood Story Randy Doyle Pollution Prevention Program Manager. 2009 GSA International Products and Services Expo.

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BioPreferred Champions: Sustainable Building and Design Randy Doyle, Fort Hood (Part 2)

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  1. BioPreferred Champions: Sustainable Building and DesignRandy Doyle, Fort Hood(Part 2) 2009 GSA International Products and Services Expo

  2. Sustainable SolutionsThe Fort Hood StoryRandy DoylePollution Prevention Program Manager 2009 GSA International Products and Services Expo

  3. Environmental Mission Balanced Readiness Through Environmental Stewardship

  4. FORT HOOD STATISTICS • 214,968 acres – 335 square miles • - (5x the size of the District of Columbia) • - Maneuver area: 135,149 acres • - Live fire impact area: 62,611 acres • 772 miles of paved roads • 21 active access control points • 471 miles of tank trails • 7,238 active buildings • - 33,050,584 square feet (5x the size of the pentagon) • 1,991 miles of utility lines • 2 airfields • North Fort Hood mobilization site

  5. CHALLENGES OF FORT HOOD 6,513 FAMILY QUARTERS BELTON LAKE OUTDOOR RECREATION AREA (5,473 ACRES) COMMISSARY PX 2 COMMISSARIES 2 POST EXCHANGES 265 ENLISTED BARRACKS 56 MOTOR POOLS PHYSICAL PLANT 9 PHYSICAL FITNESS CENTERS 33 MIL SF OF FACILITIES (4 PENTAGONS) 772 MILES OF ROAD 9 CHAPELS 22 CEMETERIES

  6. CHALLENGES OF FORT HOOD PERSONNEL MILITARY ASSIGNED 57,317 ON POST FAMILY MEMBERS 17,903 CIVILIANS 17,333 DIVISIONS 2 CORPS SPT CMD 1 BRIGADES 14 GROUPS 3 BATTALIONS 53 COMPANIES 302 DETACHMENTS 28 SUPPORTED POPULATION OF 419,957 TOTAL YEARLY ECONOMIC IMPACT $10.852 BILLION

  7. CEN-TEX Sustainable Communities Partnership • 5-year collaboration (extensions possible) • Initial Team- Fort Hood, Harker Heights, Killeen, Copperas Cove, and Gatesville • Achieve measurable benefits by creating sustainable baselines and goals • Implement projects to contribute to the vitality of the Central Texas economy and quality of life for the region’s citizens Sustainable Communities

  8. CEN-TEX Sustainable Communities PartnershipWhere are we going? • Promote Partnership across Region • Ideas for positive regional changes • Fundraising using grants • Identify potential projects : • Solar and Wind Energy • Mass Transit • LEED for Neighborhood Development • Watershed and Habitat Protection • Regional Recycling • Smart Growth Master Plan • Ride Share Program • Bio-Preferred Solutions

  9. Fort Hood Agriboard Buildings

  10. Future Environmental Office Designed with Agriboard

  11. Fort Hood Straw Bale Grant Project • Unique Approach to Building Sustainable • Exemplifies EO 13423 “High Performance Buildings” • Design and construct world’s largest straw bale facility • Complies with Army SDD Policy and the Federal biobased procurement policy • Eliminates WWII Wood • Address a 5 million square foot deficit in administrative facilities. • $27M Potential Grant Monies Available • Federal and non-profit applicants • Several federal agencies award grants to other federal agencies • A very positive project to demonstrate that the federal government is committed to cost effective sustainable design and development

  12. Low Impact Development (LID) Bioswale in existing drainage ditch Captures first flow pollutants and retains water to prevent erosion down stream

  13. PV and Wind Demonstrations Fort Hood is evaluating renewable energy options for new construction and existing buildings Photovoltaics silicon monocrystalline thin film (most likely cadmium telluride) Demonstration will compare the different PV technologies to determine which one performs best in this environment and includes a small wind turbine to see which technology has the best output.

  14. Contact Information Randy Doyle Pollution Prevention Program Manager Fort Hood, Texas (254) 287-1099 randy.doyle@us.army.mil

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