New Zealand Commercial Design Trends Series NZ Commercial Design Trends Vol. 30/12 | Page 126

adjacent structures. The grey water is stored in an 11,356-litre underground cistern for irrigation of the aquaponic plants and fish tanks alongside. It also irrigates a living wall, one of two in the facility, that grows up the dormitory wall at the rear of the Ecodome. Students can not only open a window into the greenhouse from their room, taking in its warmth, they can also reach round and pluck a hop or flower, depending on the particular crop growing up the brickwork. “The Ecodome is the iconic focal point of IES,” says Patterson. “As well as a flexible learning lab, 118 search | save | share at trendsideas.com the space acts as a link between the residential, academic and social aspects of the institute.” Besides its prominent green strategies of passive ventilation, geothermal heating and rainwater harvesting, the integrated facility is a living example of cyclic green thinking in other ways, too. “Add to these large-scale sustainable strategies such novelties as students living in the same building as the crop space they tend and a café with a menu that will incorporate some of what’s grown in the building, and you have this closed-loop mentality,” says Patterson. Above:Central divide – a pedestrian route separates the existing Loyola University Chicago campus on the left from the Institute of Environmental Sustainability on the right. This area can be planted for outdoor crop research in the future. Story by Charles Moxham Photography by David Burke