New Hopland building integrates nature with function

Apr 5, 2012

Posts salvaged from a century-old mill mark the entrance to the Rod Shippey facility.
Posts salvaged from a century-old mill mark the entrance to the Rod Shippey facility.
Woodpecker-friendly siding harvested from a UC-managed forest and posts salvaged from a century-old mill are among the many “green” features at a new University of California facility currently under construction in Mendocino County.

The new Rod Shippey Educational Facility and Field Laboratory at the UC Hopland Research and Extension Center is currently under construction, scheduled for completion in June. The facility is being constructed to meet standards equivalent to Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) certification, per University of California requirements of new buildings.

“We want this building to be educational itself,” said Bob Keiffer, superintendent of the UC Hopland Research and Extension Center. “We are trying every which way possible to incorporate ‘green aspects’ into this building.”

As early as October the building will welcome visitors to learn about natural resources, agriculture and science. It is expected to comfortably seat 180 to 200 people.

“We envision this building as being used by the entire community of the North Coast. There’s no other large meeting facility of this kind in Mendocino County that we know of and that will have this connection to the outdoors,” Keiffer said.

The larger posts were reclaimed from the old Pacific Lumber Company’s Scotia mill. The smaller posts were donated by North Cal Wood Products.
The larger posts were reclaimed from the old Pacific Lumber Company’s Scotia mill. The smaller posts were donated by North Cal Wood Products.
Reclaimed wood with history

Community members are also contributing to the project. Six 27-foot tall reclaimed Douglas fir posts will greet visitors at the entry of the Rod Shippey Facility, a feature made possible in part to a donation by North Cal Wood Products, a Ukiah company that specializes in reclaimed and recycled wood. These posts, with 13 smaller timbers along the breezeway, have been reclaimed from the Pacific Lumber Company mill in Scotia, once the largest redwood mill ever constructed.

“We went out to the yard and saw them slice open the first timber,” said Shawn Tibor, director of facilities for UC Agriculture and Natural Resources. “With the timbers being 100 years old from another structure, we had to decide on-site where to position each post’s face. They have character, let’s put it that way. But all of them are standing now and have been stained.”

The Penofin wood stain was donated by another Ukiah company, Performance Coatings.

Cedar siding from Blodgett Forest is stained with donated eco-friendly Verde-line Penofin stain from Performance Coatings.
Cedar siding from Blodgett Forest is stained with donated eco-friendly Verde-line Penofin stain from Performance Coatings.

Woodpeckers welcome

“We have one of the densest populations of acorn woodpeckers anywhere in the state. The woodpeckers form granaries where they store acorns, sometimes in trees — and sometimes in buildings,” Keiffer said. “They can actually be quite destructive, with a series of half-inch holes all over the place.”

Impervious siding seemed like a requirement for the new building, until designers praised the weathered characteristics of historic barns on the property.

“We really tried to design this building so that it ties people to the natural world,” Keiffer said. “We want a very close relationship between the building and what’s outside—and the acorn woodpecker is a major part of that.”

So the building materials actually encourage woodpeckers to make use of the building. Cedar siding, soft enough to welcome woodpeckers, was sourced from UC Berkeley’s Blodgett Forest Research Station and fitted to a waterproof membrane that will help further protect the building.

First UC building with siding from a UC-managed forest

No other University of California building has sourced wood directly from the Blodgett Forest before, according to Robert York, research stations manager with the Center for Forestry at UC Berkeley.

The Blodgett Forest in the Sierra Nevada near Georgetown in El Dorado County, is harvested each year in the context of the station’s research, usually with contractors harvesting the trees and commercial sawmills purchasing the logs. Tracking wood from a single forest through a commercial mill would be difficult, so instead logs for the Hopland facility’s 7,500 board-feet of 1-inch siding went to the station’s own small sawmill, which is more commonly used for educational demonstrations.

“It was actually me out there doing most of the milling of the siding,” York said.

Robert York cuts an incense cedar board for Hopland on a portable sawmill at Blodgett Forest. Photo by Nicholas Kunz.
Robert York cuts an incense cedar board for Hopland on a portable sawmill at Blodgett Forest. Photo by Nicholas Kunz.
Though it was “unusual,” he said the idea of providing siding for another UC research facility fit into the station’s mission to facilitate research in other forests.

“I think it does represent the kind of collaboration that we can have between research sites in California,” York said. “We're all trying to improve ways of managing and understanding natural resources. Whether it's a forest or a grassland, we all have this objective that's shared between us.”

Efficiency within a narrow budget

Plans for the building have evolved when it comes to funding, efficiency and green design. The building was originally slated for $1.7 million capital funding in the state’s 2007 budget, which was later frozen until January 2010. Private donations, including an anonymous $750,000 pledge, have helped make the building a reality.

Budget restrictions have meant cutting back on some of the more innovative systems that could further lower heating costs, reduce water needs and improve the building’s overall eco-friendliness. Passive heating, cooling and indoor-comfort measures have been implemented in the meantime, and construction has moved forward keeping as many other options open as possible. For example, the building’s restrooms are plumbed with separate grey-water and black-water pipes, which would make plans for on-site black-water treatment more feasible in the future.

“We’re situated so that if next year we get funded for something more integrative or progressive, the possibilities remain,” Tibor said. “There’s no limit to great, innovative ideas; it’s the budget that drives things.”

Get construction update and more details about green features at the facility's website http://ucanr.org/sites/Rod_Shippey_Facility.