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    Museums show environmentally sustainable behavior

    Art Institute of Chicago Modern WingThe Art Institute of Chicago’s new Modern Wing will include museum gardens and plantings that will increase green space on the city block by 21,075 square feet.

    Forget Corinthian columns: Today’s museums have features like green roofs – such as on the new wing at the Institute of Fine Arts in Chicago – or goats as part of the maintenance team, as at the Getty Center in Los Angeles, the first facility in the US to qualify for LEED certification on an existing building.

    “I cannot count the number of institutions that are doing serious green stuff. That’s how huge it is,” says Sarah Brophy, coauthor of “The Green Museum,” to be published later this spring. “[Green measures] are going to become as natural and automatic as full accessibility and inclusivity,” Brophy says. “Within a year, the public is going to be asking all museums about their environmentally sustainable behavior. They’re going to want to see evidence. That will push all museums. There’s a pretty substantial learning curve, but the entire population is going to be going through it, and museums will be part of that group.”

    Read article (the Christian Science Monitor. April 9, 2008)
    Read about museums that are ‘going green’
    Read an extensive case study of the Grand Rapids Art Museum, dubbed “The Temple of Green” (GreenSource).

    Related posts:  As a living museum, Chicago needs no special exhibit  //  Dutch underground hip hop artist releases CD in Netherlands Architecture Institute  //

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