EVOLVE Business and Professional Magazine November 2017 | Page 18

HIGHER EDUCATION AT F OREFRONT OF SUSTAINABILIT Y MOVEMENT SHAPING A NEW MINDFULNESS FOR 21 ST CENTURY LIVING AND BUSINESS A by Harry Russo week after Hurricane Irma ripped through the Sunshine State, a group of Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University engineering and Daytona State College interior design students scrambled to prepare a 1,000-square-foot house they built for shipment to Denver, CO., in time to compete in the U.S. Department of Energy’s prestigious Solar Decathlon 2017 held Oct. 5 – 15. The scholars comprising Team Daytona Beach were among 11 collegiate squads from around the world vying for a share of over $2 million in DOE prize money. They spent almost two years designing and building their energy-efficient BEACH House, blending design excellence and smart energy balance with innovative engineering, market potential and affordability. “The BEACH House (BEACH stands for Building Efficient, Affordable and Comfortable Homes) is designed to allow a small family to live sustainably without sacrificing comfort,” said DSC interior design professor Deborah Kincaid. “It features an open floor plan that provides the energy-saving ability of a high- technology house at an affordable price, and is engineered to perform in Central Florida’s hot and humid climate.” Despite difficulties stemming from transporting the BEACH house to Colorado in the wake of nearly two weeks of construction delays courtesy of Irma, Team Daytona still managed to secure 1,000-square-foot house built by Team Daytona Beach | 18 | EVOLVE BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL MAGAZINE third-place honors in the contest’s Market Potential category. The Swiss team outshined the entire field. Just by participating in the DOE Solar Decathlon, however, Team Daytona Beach became part of national movement to create awareness of the value and imperativeness of sustainable living, and the epicenter of that movement is in the nation’s institutions of higher education. Nearly 1,000 American colleges and universities have pledged to “green” their operations and motivate students to seek sustainable solutions to environmental, societal and economic challenges, according to the Association for the Advancement of Sustainability in Higher Education. They are enhancing their courses, developing new academic programs, creating new graduation requirements and training faculty on how to integrate sustainability across the curriculum in order to