environment

A traymendous phenomena

Apparently, we are not the only school going “trayless.” According to an article from insidehighered.com schools like Colby and Alfred (a university in New York) are experimenting dining sans tray. This movement has led to reductions of up to one-third of waste produced in a given day. Here’s the thing; I don’t care. I really like trays and I don’t agree with this hypothesis because instead of creating less waste, I am actually just forced to get more plates and then I am so resentful that I leave them on that table near the waffle station because I have a noon class on Tuesday/Thursday and the line is too long. So maybe we have a trade off between more manual labor and less waste. I’m not going to consider this point further. Instead, I am just going to continue to be bitter and ask that my conservative university quit trying to pretend that we do more than recycle. 

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Campuses getting greener

College campuses are finding new ways to be eco-friendly, such as reducing waste production, using lower watt light bulbs, and encouraging students to use more energy-efficient refrigerators.  Colleges from Harvard to Oberlin are finding new ways to make their campuses environment friendly and they are getting support from the students, who attend their ‘trash-free dances’ and compete in a competition to see which dorm is the most ‘green,’ this winning the ‘Green Cup.’ Oberlin has even incorporated their concern for the environment in their architecture. 

The Lewis Center at Oberlin, opened in 2000, was one of the first. It’s powered entirely by solar arrays, which produce 30 percent more energy than the building consumes—and this is in cloudy Ohio. Sensors throughout the building monitor energy use. And all wastewater is purified on site in a “living machine,” an artificial wetland with carefully selected tropical plants and microorganisms that filter the water. Located in the building’s lobby, the living machine looks like a greenhouse. “You’d have no clue it’s a wastewater system,” says Orr. It even includes an indoor waterfall, powered by the sun, with 600 gallons of water flowing across a rocky surface. As long as the sun is shining, the water flows.

Do we think this is something Wake could do?  Maybe to a certain extent, but piling up all of our trash on the quad as they do at Harvard would not fly.  We would never allow “Mount Trashmore,” as it has been named, to sit on the Mag Quad.  I think we do some things to benefit the environment here, but aesthetics are still a big priority at Wake Forest.

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Because losing trays at the Pit wasn't bad enough

Wake goes greener and I Go Greedy

After my afternoon run today I naturally went to take a shower. Now this summer I had read about Wake installing new “environmentally friendly” shower heads on campus, but was quite relieved to discover that my suite in Taylor had remained untouched. I like a good amount of water pressure and I will hand it to Wake that they had been good about this, UNTIL today.

Today when I went to shower I was unimpressed by the lackluster water pressure coming out of the new shiny silver shower head. While I understand our university is buying into the myth of “global warming” I do not need to sacrifice this element of my daily routine.

There was only one response to the situation: turn on the other shower head so both run simultaneously. This only prolonged my stay in the shower, thus compensating for the saved water; or so I would like to think.

Tags: wake+forest, environment, | 4 Comments