The SKETCH_PAD - CATALYST ARCHITECTURE Newsletter for Clients and Colleagues




CATALYST'S 1st LEED Building Featured in Local PressMoreMore
Principal Zucker Attends Super-Adobe WorkshopMore
CATALYST Hires New Project and Office ManagersMore
Jeffrey L. Zucker's Ohio Cabin Published in BookMore
Principal Ackerman To Appear on Access Channel 13More
Prescott Residents Collaborate to Collect RainwaterMore
  Arizona Tribal Nation To Tap The Power of The WindMore




DATE EVENT LOCATION PHONE
5/10
SW Water Issues Update Prescott, AZ 928-445-4218
5/14
Does That House Come in Green? Phoenix, AZ 480-946-9600
5/17 Affordable Solar Water Heating Prescott, AZ 928-778-2828
5/19-20  Eco-Build America
Anaheim, CA 800-996-3863
6/2-6/6 Energy OutWest 2008
Scottsdale, AZ 800-942-4978
6/10
Selling High Performance Homes Las Vegas, NV 952-881-1098


Matthew B. Ackerman,  LEED  AIA
Matthew B. Ackerman,  LEED  AIA
Jeffrey L. Zucker,  LEED  AIA
Jeffrey L. Zucker,  LEED  AIA

Crisis & American Ingenuity


Oil just passed $120 a barrel this morning, another record high.   Some folks are surprised by the headline-making price rises, but are hopeful fuel costs will settle back down as soon as the summer driving season is over, or the nuclear standoff with Iran ends, or… the weather stops acting weird. 

In the 2004 documentary film "The End of Suburbia," a sobering look at the un-sustainable way so many of our nation's
towns and cities have developed, the cost of fuel is presented as a simple matter of supply and demand.  Despite optimistic media attention about new oil resources in the tar sands of Canada, or in the deep waters off the coast of Brazil, the fact remains that global oil production already has, or will very soon "peak," meaning that regardless of the amount of money or energy that is invested in getting oil out of the ground, the net yield will simply be less oil– driving the cost of recovering that oil higher.

Unfortunately, it doesn't take much of a gap between the declining amounts of available world oil, against the backdrop of steadily increasing energy demands from China, India and other developing countries, to result in the historic rise in fuel prices that we're now seeing. 

A fact that so many of us seem to be unaware of, however, is just how deeply dependent our American way of life is on the ready supply of this finite energy source– far beyond the optional weekend boating trip to Lake Powell, or another tank of gas in the 16-mpg SUV that we use mainly just to tool around town in.  Everything from toothbrushes at Wal-Mart, to that package of blueberries from New Frontiers depends upon the availability of cheap oil, not to mention
our winter heating fuel needs, or the ever expanding demand of our country's electrical power grid.

Beyond the obvious pain at the gas pump, there are dozens of other less obvious production and distribution relationships, which also depend heavily on the availability of cheap fossil fuels.  As crude oil prices reach towards the $150 to $175, to $200 a barrel mark, many of these interrelationships may simply stop working– such as the ability to maintain our highway infrastucture and interstate trucking systems.   There is a very real chance of a breakdown of some of our most taken-for-granted societal and economic structures once this happens. 
And while this might sound unbelievable in our country– concerns over finding basic food supplies on grocery store shelves could become a very real issue here– as they already have in many parts of the world.

So, what does all this mean?  Is there hope?  I believe there is.  If anything, it is the automobile dependent way our towns and cities have been physically laid out that is very much at the heart of the problem.  While Prescott has within its downtown square and older neighborhoods, the remnants of a more sustainable development pattern which encouraged walking down to the grocery or hardware store, or being able to ride your bike to work, or to school, or just for fun. 

This was a pedestrian oriented development model of higher densities, mixed-uses, and functioning communities.  Today, it is known as "New Urbanism" or "Smart Growth".  And, as much as everyone loves these older parts of our city though, it is actually illegal to build this way in many communities today, requiring one zoning variance after another, just to try and recreate some of its most
fundamental aspects.

What can be done?  Well, first of all, current planning and zoning codes which actually discourage more sustainable development patterns need to be addressed.  Alternative personal and mass-transit modes must be dusted off and reconsidered.  Critically important are re-localized food production, as well as aggressive water and energy conservation strategies that must become part of our basic planning and development choices.  It can seem overwhelming.

I was sharing a drink with
a friend of mine, Martin, last week, and took the opportunity to describe the laundry list of concerns I have about our country's future.  Martin just listened patiently as I talked, a sly smile on his face.  After I finished, he said  "Matt… I don't think the picture's quite as bleak as it seems.  This is the land of Home Depots. We're a do-it-yourself, I-can-figure-this-out nation, with amazing resources for ingenuity and inventiveness that we've only just begun to tap.  Yeah, things might get a little scary for a while, but if any country can figure out how to solve problems like these– we Americans can."

You know what, I'll bet he's right.

 
Matthew B. Ackerman, LEED AIA

CATALYST ARCHITECTURE, LLC U.S. Green Building Council
Green Product of the Month:
Reclaimed Wood Products are Beautiful and Save Trees  More

Green Project of the Month:
Kansas Town Rebuilds As a Green Community  More  

Green Builder's Tip of the Month:
Rainwater Harvesting: Comparing Storage Solutions  More

Green Technology of the Month:
Super-Adobe (Earth-Bag) Construction Provides Low-Cost, Low-Tech Shelter  More




CATALYST ARCHITECTURE
is an award winning, full-service architectural design firm located in Prescott, Arizona. We specialize in educational, commercial, master planning and custom residential work, with an emphasis on high- performance design, and caring client relationships.


At CATALYST, our mission is to creatively transform the space and budget needs of our clients, with the opportunities and ecology of the site, into functional and sustainable solutions that move the spirit.

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123 E Goodwin St, Prescott Arizona 86303 - F 928.778.3509 - P 928.778.3508
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