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The 2002 Energy Efficiency Integration Awards (EEIA) Winners
Five outstanding nonresidential buildings have been recognized for their integration of energy efficiency and architectural design as the culmination of the 2002 Savings By Design Energy Efficiency Integrations Awards competition. The winning design teams received their awards at the 2002 AIACC Awards Celebration in San Francisco on Sept. 22. The announcement was made jointly by the competition’s cosponsors: Pacific Gas and Electric, San Diego Gas and Electric, Southern California Edison, Southern California Gas Company, and the AIA, California Council.
“This year’s entries raised the level of competition across the board,” commented Janith Johnson, AIA, manager of nonresidential new construction programs at Southern California Edison. “It made the jurors’ job more difficult, but it was gratifying to see better examples than ever of the integration of energy efficiency in new building design that we are fostering through the Savings By Design program.”
The jurors chose two projects for Awards of Honor, citing their intelligent integration of energy efficiency into aesthetically outstanding building design. They bestowed Citations of Merit to three more projects for achieving specific aspects of energy-efficient and sustainable design.

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Camp Arroyo
Year: 2002
Architect: Siegel & Strain Architects
Owner/Submitted By: Camp Arroyo
Location: Livermore, CA
Award of HonorDesigned by Siegel & Strain Architects, Camp Arroyo is an environmental education facility and summer camp comprising 18,000 sq. ft. that includes six duplex cabins, a dining hall, a swimming pool and two bath houses.
It employs careful siting, three different approaches to structure, and low-tech means of conserving energy and minimizing environmental impacts to demonstrate ecological design.

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Governor’s Office of Emergency Services, Headquarters and State Operations
Year: 2002
Architect: Dreyfuss & Blackford Architects and RossDrulisCusenbery Architecture, Inc.
Owner/Submitted By: State of California Office of Emergency Services
Location: Sacramento, CA
Award of HonorLocated at the 12-acre decommissioned Mather Air Force Base, this 111,000 sq. ft. building is the strategic command center for the State of California Office of Emergency Services and it handles a full range of emergency response activities, including information gathering, strategic planning, collective decision making, and information dissemination. The facility is a 24-hour, high-security facility whose design furthers the dialogue surrounding the emergency operations center as an evolving public building type.

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International Terminal at San Francisco Airport
Year: 2002
Architect: Skidmore, Owings & Merrill LLP
Owner/Submitted By: San Francisco Airport
Location: San Francisco, CA
Award of MeritThe third Citation of Merit winner was the International Terminal at San Francisco International Airport, which houses international arrival and departure facilities including those of the Federal Inspection Service.
Designed by Skidmore, Owings & Merrill LLP, the 1.8 million sq. ft. facility features a double-cantilever roof design that significantly reduces the need for electric light sources and displacement ventilators that cool only the occupied strata of public space.

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Ross School
Year: 2002
Architect: EHDD Architecture
Owner/Submitted By: Ross School
Location: Ross, CA
Award of MeritThe Ross School in Ross, Calif. is a modernization project that deconstructed some existing classrooms and added 16,100 sq. ft. of new classrooms between and connecting to existing buildings.
Designed by EHDD Architecture, the project avoids the use of mechanical air conditioning through the use of sun shading, spectrally selective glazing, a cool roof, night ventilation cooling, and cross-ventilation. In addition, half of the classrooms are fully daylit.

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South Coast Watershed Resource Center
Year: 2002
Architect: Blackbird Architects, Inc.
Owner/Submitted By: South Coast Watershed Resource Center
Location: Santa Barbara, CA
Award of MeritThis project is a rehabilitation/restoration of a vacant former ranger residence and grounds in a county park containing a heavily-visited public beach.






