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Solar Strand on Wall Street Journal list of ‘Best Architecture of 2014’

Solar Strand.

Hundreds of community members gathered at UB’s Solar Strand to celebrate its opening to the public in April 2013. Photo: Douglas Levere

By RACHEL TEAMAN

Published January 19, 2015 This content is archived.

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“At a time when fields of PV panels and wind turbine ‘farms’ are a reality, planted in vast undifferentiated arrays that assault the eye, not to mention birds and other animals, Solar Strand offers a thoughtful alternative. ”
Julie Iovine, architecture critic
Wall Street Journal

An article in The Wall Street Journal listing “The Best Architecture of 2014” includes UB’s Solar Strand, calling the 3,200-panel, ground-mounted photovoltaic array a “small but telling model of landscape architecture at its most forward-thinking.”

Envisioning energy as part of the cultural and built landscape, the Solar Strand stands at the main entrance to UB's North Campus and provides a striking but practical campus gateway. The 750-kilowatt array generates enough energy to power hundreds of student apartments while offsetting the emission of nearly 400 tons of greenhouse gases annually.

“At a time when fields of PV panels and wind turbine ‘farms’ are a reality, planted in vast undifferentiated arrays that assault the eye, not to mention birds and other animals, Solar Strand offers a thoughtful alternative,” writes Julie V. Iovine, the Journal’s architecture critic.

The array was designed by the celebrated landscape architect, artist and educator Walter Hood, who was selected through an international design competition sponsored by UB.

The design competition, which attracted an initial field of 23 artists and landscape architects from around the world, called for a solar array that would be integrated into the campus landscape, accessible to students and the community, and representative of a new design vocabulary for solar installations around the world.

The project got its start in 2009 when the New York Power Authority approached UB with an interest in funding the construction of a conventional, ground-mounted photovoltaic array across several acres at the North Campus entrance. University leadership took the project to the next level, with NYPA’s support, proposing to elevate design standards for the project through an international design competition.

Robert Shibley, dean of the School of Architecture and Planning, UB’s campus architect and chair of the selection committee for the competition, reflected on the design process in a recent article in Domus, an international architectural publication:

“To transform a simple utility field into a land art installation, we mounted an international design competition that asked artists to consider solar panels as their medium and our campus gateway as their canvas. We were presenting the opportunity to make art from something that tended to be somewhat pedestrian, and that was increasingly subject to ‘not-in-my-backyard’ obstruction. I think for some artists that’s a very interesting challenge.”

Hood’s winning vision was to build the installation into the campus landscape. The 15-acre site features regenerating meadows, a meandering creek and vernal pools. Set in the background are the university’s chilled water plant and generator system.

The Solar Strand’s design logic is based on the “strand” concept: a linear landscape formation and DNA fingerprint. Groups of photovoltaic panels are mounted at staggering heights onto supports that stretch in three rows. Walkways run between the rows of panels, connecting the array with local roads, UB’s Center for Tomorrow and naturally regenerated meadows and wetland areas that the public can enjoy.

Shibley continued in Domus: “The jury was struck by his (Hood’s) thoughtful response to the history, geography and ecology of the campus, from the way he envisioned the Solar Strand feathering into the wildness of the creek on the site to its non-invasive treatment of the indigenous vernal pools … Walter keyed in on the part of our invitation that said: ‘Make us a great entrance to our campus.’”

Distinguished by its accessibility and people-centered design, the Solar Strand is designed as a public gathering space and outdoor classroom. Its two largest panel sets rise to 28 feet, forming an almost cathedral-like public plaza. Since being powered on in 2012, the Solar Strand has generated more than 240,000 kilowatt hours, offsetting the emission of more than 1,700 tons of CO2 and the consumption of 194,000 gallons of gasoline.