Sweet Auburn: The Magazine of the Friends of Mount Auburn Mount Auburn: Chapters of Poetry & Prose | Page 23
Greenhouse
Construction
Update
By Stephanie Gillette, External Affairs Coordinator
Mount Auburn Cemetery’s Board of Trustees
gathered with officials from Watertown and
Cambridge to break ground at the site of the
Cemetery’s new greenhouse on Thursday, June
14, 2012. Replacing Mount Auburn’s existing
41-year- old facility, the new greenhouse will
greatly reduce energy demands while improving
Mount Auburn’s ability to propagate historically and eco-
logically appropriate plantings for its nationally significant
landscape. Among the features of the new facility are
open-roof venting, computerized climate controls, and an
underground 30,000 gallon cistern for collecting water off
the greenhouse roof to be used to irrigate the plants being
propagated inside.
The Cemetery’s existing greenhouses already reflect
Mount Auburn’s commitment to the most ecologically
sound maintenance practices. In the past several years,
the Cemetery’s greenhouse staff has replaced the use of
chemical pesticides with beneficial insects, increased its
production of compost and compost teas for use in the
greenhouse and on the grounds, and employed companion
plants in its cut flower gardens to reduce insect and disease
problems. The new greenhouse facility will allow Mount
Auburn to expand its sustainable maintenance practices and
allow these practices to then be shared with other botanic
gardens, landscape professionals, and home gardeners.
The construction of Mount Auburn’s new greenhouse is
the first phase in the Cemetery’s long-term vision for a new
Horticulture Center. The project has been funded through
a combination of fundraising and institutional support.
The Center will include classroom and community meeting
space, new offices for the Cemetery’s horticultural staff, and
expanded facilities for the Cemetery’s growing volunteer
program. Designed by the Boston architectural firm of Wil-
liam Rawn Associates, the Horticulture Center is planned
to achieve the highest level of certification (Platinum) from
the Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED)
program of the U.S. Green Building Council.
The project, managed by Consigli Construction Co.,
Inc., began in June with the demolition of a small house,
once occupied by the Cemetery’s gardener, and its existing
greenhouse facility, both located along Grove Street in Wa-
tertown. The construction of the new greenhouse is now
underway and will be completed in early 2013.
35,0000 gallon cistern for collecting rainwater to be used for irrigation
View from Southeast Corner
Winter 2013 | 21