Miami museums prepare as Hurricane Irma approaches

What a month.

Museums in Miami and Miami Beach are taking precautionary measures ahead of the possible landfall of Hurricane Irma.

Pérez Art Museum Miami (PAMM), The Wolfsonian—Florida International University (Wolfsonian-FIU, www.wolfsonian.org), the Institute of Contemporary Arts Miami (ICA Miami), Dimensions Variable, the Vizcaya Museum and Gardens, and Faena Art closed yesterday (Wednesday) and will remain closed through the weekend.

The Pérez Art Museum Miami was designed and engineered to withstand the vicissitudes of extreme weather.

The ICA Miami’s new building, expected to open to the public in December, is also designed to weather extreme storms. The museum “’collection is currently being held in a state-of-the-art storage facility, which also adheres to hurricane codes’”.

The Bass Museum of Art, currently undergoing expansion and expected to open in October, has an action plan to protect the building, the collection, and employees.

See:

Miami museums hunker down ahead of Hurricane Irma” | Helen Stoilas, The Art Newspaper, 6 September 2017

Pérez Art Museum Built ‘Like Rock of Gibralter’ for Hurricanes” | Rudabeh Shahbazi, CBS Miami, 9 June 2017

Pérez Art Museum” | Knippers Helbig Advanced Engineering

#art #museums #Miami #MiamiBeach #artcollections #resilience #realestate #climatechange #climaterisk #HurricaneIrma #Irma #smartluxury

 

 

when buying a home in a “global warming zone”

Ron Lieber, the “Money” columnist for the New York Times, suggests a team to work with and a process to follow when purchasing a house “in a global warming zone.”

Mr. Lieber suggests:

a real estate professional

who has deep knowledge of the local market and has lived through a few floods, fires or hurricanes”

a municipal flood expert

“preferably someone from town or city government who can explain any and all regulations you might need to know about when or if you ever want or need to fix your place up”

a local insurance expert

    • what sort of insurance claims the home has generated in the recent past
    • two reports to obtain and read: the CLUE, for Comprehensive Loss Underwriting Exchange, and A-PLUS
    • “get both, follow up with the homeowner and ask about any flood insurance claims or FEMA grants that may not show up on the reports”

“Read every word of the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s website on the flood insurance program before you buy a home”

a home inspector

    • who can check how well the roof might hold up in a hurricane

When out looking at houses, check the features of the houses

    • look out for special impact-resistant glass in the windows or hurricane shutters.
    • wind mitigation inspection, how well the roof might hold up

Make like a reporter and talk to any potential neighbors”

    • ask questions

See:

You’re Buying a Home. Have You Considered Climate Change?” | Ron Lieber, The New York Times, 2 December 2016

#realestate #climatechange #climaterisk #resilience #smartluxury #finance #insurance #floods #municipalfloodexpert #art #artcollections #museums #privatemuseums

east & west coast ・sea level rise & things to think about now, before you invest your life savings

Gloria Tello is reconsidering. “’These are things you have to think about now, before you invest your life savings into a business.’”

A stylist who does hair and makeup for weddings, Ms. Tello had planned to capitalize on nearby bridal boutiques and open her own studio in the City of Coral Gables, Miami-Dade County, Florida. Having experienced water inundating the streets while a college student and learning of the risk of heavy neighborhood flooding over the next decades, she is reconsidering. While some businesses pile sandbags at their doors, she wonders “how small business owners can cope with it.”

Coastal California is already experiencing the effects of sea level rise.

Says San Mateo supervisor Dave Pine, “We are at the point of no return in fighting climate change and if we don’t reduce emissions there will be catastrophic impacts.”

With sea level rises set to affect more than 100,000 residents of San Mateo County (as of a 2009 analysis, “The Impacts of Sea-Level Rise on the California Coast”), potential property damage in the county is estimated to be about $39 billion.

California coastal communities both north and south are filing suit against 37 “carbon majors,” including Shell, Chevron, Statoil, Exxon, and Total. San Mateo and Marin Counties in northern California and San Diego County’s City of Imperial Beach claim that greenhouse gas emissions from the fossil fuel companies’ activities over the last 50 years have locked in substantial sea level rises, which will cause billions of dollars’ worth of damage to properties and businesses, as well as endangering lives.

San Mateo and Marin Counties and Imperial Beach claim that the defendant companies “have known for nearly 50 years years that greenhouse gas pollution from their fossil fuel products has a significant impact on the Earth’s climate and sea levels” and engaged in a “co-ordinated, multi-front effort to conceal and deny their knowledge of these threats”.

See:

When Rising Seas Hit Home, Hard Choices Ahead for Hundreds of US Coastal Communities” | Union of Concerned Scientists, July 2017

Exxon, Shell and other carbon producers sued for sea level rises in California” | Laura Paddison, The Guardian, 26 July 2017

Rising Seas in California, An Update on Sea-Level Rise Science” | Working Group of the California Ocean Protection Council – Science Advisory Team (OPC-SAT), California Ocean Science Trust, April 2017

The Impacts of Sea-Level Rise on the California Coast” | California Climate Change Center, 2009

#realestate #resilience #smartluxury #art #CO2 #climaterisk #sealevelrise #ImperialBeach #SanMateoCounty #MarinCounty #Miami-DadeCounty #Miami #Florida #California

 

iconic glass buildings ・energy neutral & aesthetically beautiful

Looking beyond roof surface to make modern commercial and residential buildings energy neutral, Physee, a tech startup headquartered in the Netherlands, has developed and installed the world’s first commercial, fully transparent solar-power-generating windows.

Ferdinand Grapperhaus, co-founder and CEO of the startup and a graduate of Delft Technical University, says “Right now, we are looking for iconic projects all over the world to show that a large glass building can be made energy neutral in an aesthetic way.”

“Large commercial estates consume a lot of energy. If you want to make these buildings energy neutral, you never have enough roof surface. Therefore, activating the buildings’ facades will significantly contribute to making the buildings energy neutral.”

Physee’s PowerWindows have solar cells installed in the edges at a specific angle. The angle allows the incoming solar light to be efficiently transformed into electricity.

The company is already working on second-generation technology that will triple the efficiency of the PowerWindows. The new technology is based on the ability of thulium to transform a broad spectrum of light into near-infrared light. Grapperhaus and his classmate Willem Kesteloo discovered this ability of thulium to transform a broad spectrum of light into near-infrared light in 2014 while studying at TU Delft.

The surface of the second generation of PowerWindows will be coated with a special, thuliam-enhanced material. This material will transforms oncoming visible light into near-infrared light. The near-infrared light will then be transported towards the solar cells at the edges of the windows.

The headquarters of Rabobank, the Netherlands’ largest bank, commissioned the first installation of Physee’s PowerWindows. The installation was unveiled in June in Eindhoven, in the south of the Netherlands.

Observes Physee’s Ferdinand Grapperhaus, “Large commercial estates consume a lot of energy. If you want to make these buildings energy neutral, you never have enough roof surface. Therefore, activating the buildings’ facades will significantly contribute to making the buildings energy neutral.”

The innovative solar technology has won Physee a place on the World Economic Forum‘s Technology Pioneers 2017 list.

The WEF’s 2017 list of Technology Pioneers,  announced on June 14, includes companies developing technologies including artificial intelligence, cyber security solutions and biotechnology. The pioneering companies are selected for their potential to change the world.

Physee’s presence on the list, observes Grapperhaus, shows that the world is starting to take climate change seriously:

“Ten years ago, sustainability was something that wasn’t taken very seriously — not by venture capitalists, not by many governments and neither by large corporations. What I have seen over the last three years is that corporations are becoming more and more responsible, governments are becoming more and more supportive, and venture capitalists are becoming more and more interested.”

See:

Transparent solar power creating windows debut” | BlouinNews, 29 July 2017

More Than a View: Windows Double as Solar Panels” | Tereza Pultarova, LiveScience, 3 July 2017

Introducing the Technology Pioneers 2017” | World Economic Forum

Physee | Forbes 30 Under 30 Europe

Fully tranparent solar charged PowerWindow” | Materia, 19 September 2016

#Physee #FerdinandGrapperhaus #PowerWindow #solar #solarenergy #architecture #design #climaterisk #Rabobank #finance #TUDelft #sustainability #venturecapital #WEF #WorldEconomicForum #TechnologyPioneers2017 #tech #buildingtech #startup #techstartup #CO2

PassivDom houses are very, very smart & very beautiful

PassivDom, a start-up based in Ukraine and California, is a tech-based manufacturing company.

PassivDom 3D prints self-learning modular houses, some of which are fully autonomous. “Autonomous” means “off the utility grid.” Solar energy is produced and can be stored in a battery connected to the house. Water is collected and filtered from humidity in the air. The house may feature an independent sewage system.

The manufacturing process works like this: The team develops a “map” for the 3D printers / seven-axel robots in its factories in Ukraine and California. The 3D printer / seven-axel robot prints the roof, floor, and walls layer by layer. The material used is composed of carbon fibers, polyurethane, resins, basalt fibers, and fiberglass. This material is six times stronger than steel.

Doors, windows, appliances, an alarm system, solar panels, and the septic, electrical, healing, cooling systems are then added – by people.

According to the PassivDom website, PassivDom has the highest thermal performance among residential buildings. PassivDom windows are the warmest in the world. PassivDom exceeds the energy efficiency requirements of both the Passive House Institute and LEED.

PassivDom provides a 40-year materials warranty for the preservation of thermal characteristics. There are no materials that will lose thermal conductivity.

A PassivDom house is not only a smart house, it is a “very, very smart house.” All devices are networked to the Internet of Things and can be controlled from a smart phone. The micro-climate system is self-learning, monitors oxygen and carbon dioxide, and maintains the temperature and humidity desired by the occupant.

And PassivDom houses are beautiful.

Wow.

See:

PassivDom

A robot can print this $32,000 house in as little as 8 hours — take a look inside” | Leanna Garfield, Business Insider, 6 April 2017

#smart #smarthouse #PassivDom #Ukraine #California #tech #buildingtech #realestate #art #smartluxury #resilience #luxury #3Dprinting #autonomous #offgrid #solarenergy #electricity #water #CO2 #PassivHaus #LEED

connecting the dots ・ why?

Why connect the dots between real estate, the arts, smart luxury, and resilience?

Because, as David Wallace-Wells has pointed out in “The Uninhabitable Earth”, that has quickly become New York Magazine’s most read article, ever, global warming is “worse than you think.”

Mr. Wallace-Wells believes, and I share his belief, that “the public does not appreciate the scale of climate risk.” We have not spent enough time contemplating “the risks beyond sea-level rise.” And, “that, when it comes to the challenge of climate change, public complacency is a … problem.”

We need to contemplate the risks, try to appreciate their scale, and try not be complacent.

Many of us live in houses or buildings of some shape and size, love works of art, perhaps speculate in the arts and real estate (buy for purposes of expected appreciation), and enjoy the craft, material, and sophistication of luxury. So, what about resilience?

Resilience is the ability to pick up, recover, and get through when the going gets tough. We all might need to grow our capacity for resilience. We might need also to adjust how we conduct our lives.

While “rising oceans are bad, in fact very bad; but fleeing the coastline will not be enough.” “Absent a significant adjustment to how billions of humans conduct their lives, parts of the Earth will likely become close to uninhabitable, and other parts horrifically inhospitable, as soon as the end of this century.”

So let’s keep reading and start, perhaps, adjusting our behaviors. A little bit at a time. Yes? In posts to come I will, step by step, dissect and curate information from Mr. Wallace-Wells’ opus magnum.

See:

The Uninhabitable Earth, Annotated Edition” | David Wallace-Wells, New York Magazine, 14 July 2017

#realestate #art #smartluxury #resilience #luxury

art, museums, & climate risk | the Pérez Art Museum Miami

Museums, as stewards of cultural heritage, are in it for the long term. To safeguard the artistic, historic and scientific resources they hold in trust for the public, museums need to adapt to a world where change—and water—are the new normal.

Designing for Resilience, Elizabeth Merritt, founding director, Center for the Future of Museums, an initiative of the American Alliance of Museums

The Swiss architectural firm of Herzog & de Meuron designed what is now called the Pérez Art Museum Miami (PAMM). The museum is anchor for a 30-acre museum park on Biscayne Bay in downtown Miami. The Biscayne Bay location was provided by the City of Miami. Construction of the building cost $220 million. $100 million was provided by Miami-Dade voters in general obligation bond funding. $120 million came from private donors.

The museum of modern and contemporary art is dedicated to collecting and exhibiting international art of the 20th and 21st centuries. The museum holds the largest collection of contemporary Cuban art in the United States.

The National Climate Assessment of 2014 named Miami one of the U.S. cities most vulnerable to severe damage as a result of rising sea levels. According to the report, sea levels have risen eight inches since 1870. The report projects a further rise of one to four feet by the end of the century.

The National Climate Assessment of 2014 found that while melting Arctic and Antarctic ice and rising sea levels are threatening the entire American coastline, Miami is exceptionally vulnerable due to its natural geology.

The city of Miami is built on top of porous limestone. The limestone absorbs seawater. The rising sea waters are being absorbed into the city’s foundation. The water bubbles up through pipes and drains, encroaches on fresh water supplies and saturates infrastructure. County governments estimate that the damages could rise to billions or even trillions of dollars.

In such circumstances and given Miami’s geology, how is the Pérez Art Museum Miami designed to fulfill its responsibilities as a steward of art and cultural heritage?

The architecture has been designed to adapt to the climate of Miami. The new building, opened in 2013, was specifically designed to withstand hurricanes. The museum is raised on an elevated platform above the flood plain. The museum features the largest sheets of hurricane-resistant glass in the U.S. Art storage facilities are situated more than 46 feet above sea level. The museum’s backup-electricity system runs on generators. The generators are located on the third floor.

  • The first floor of the museum was elevated by Herzog & de Meuron above the 18-foot high-water mark left by Category 5 Hurricane Andrew in 1992. The elevation acts as a safety cushion for projected effects of climate change.
  • Gaps in the floors of the patio surrounding the museum allow water from rain, storm surge or flooding to drain into the parking garage, located underneath the museum.
  • A power generator is located on the third floor of the museum. Electricity to the building is ensured even if lower floors are affected by flooding. The generator has enough fuel for three days of use, and can be refueled by truck or barge (in case the roads are blocked).
  • Second-floor windows feature the largest panels of hurricane-resistant glass in the US (17.5 feet tall by seven feet wide, each weighing 2,500 pounds).
  • The teak entrance doors weigh 550 pounds each. They each feature a multi-prong pin system. The pin system locks the doors in several places to secure them against category-five hurricane winds.
  • The hanging gardens, inclusive of the mechanical system and irrigation system, are designed to withstand a category five hurricane.
  • Should a major hurricane head towards Miami, the museum maintains plans to de-install and place in storage as much of the art as possible, starting with the most sensitive works, such as particularly rare works on paper that are sensitive to humidity and temperature fluctuations.
  • The museum’s art storage facility is situated 46 feet above sea level. This is to ensure security from flooding and water damage. Storage HVAC is designed to handle humidity levels that might follow a storm event.

See:

Jorge Pérez Donates $15 Million in Cash and Art to Miami Museum” | Hili Perlson, Artnet, 30 November 2016

Designing for Resilience” | Elizabeth Merritt, Center for the Future of Museums, an initiative of the American Alliance of Museums, 11 August 2015

Protecting Priceless Art from Natural Disasters | John Whitaker, The Atlantic, 27 May 2015

Trendswatch 2015” | Elizabeth Merritt, Center for the Future of Museums, an initiative of the American Alliance of Museums

“Miami Finds Itself Ankle-Deep in Climate Change Debate” | Carol Davenport, The New York Times, 7 May 2014

Pérez Art Museum” | Knippers Helbig Advanced Engineering

National Climate Assessment

Pérez Art Museum | Wikipedia

 

#PérezArtMuseumMiami #Miami #Herzog&deMeuron #JorgePérez #art #artcollections #climaterisk #resilience #realestate #artstorage #electricity #powergeneration #carbondioxide #CO2 #risingsealevels

 

 

David Zwirner ・forward-thinking art-world luminary

In a time of arguably increasing climate risk and concomitant regulatory risk, price risks, and prospective market adjustments, mega art dealer David Zwirner is a forward-thinking art-world pioneer and luminary. Mr. Zwirner has set a new environmental standard for art-related facilities while presenting a “a clean, elegant, modernist aesthetic that is very much about welcoming visitors today.”

During 2012’s Hurricane Sandy, more than five million gallons of water flooded the construction site of New York’s new Whitney Museum. In response, the engineering and construction of the museum building, the lobby of which is 10 feet above sea-level, and infrastructure were re-designed and re-engineered.

David Zwirner’s second Manhattan location, on West 20th Street, is situated in Chelsea close by the Hudson River. The 537 West 20th Street gallery opened in early 2013, mere months after Hurricane Sandy.

Designed by Annabelle Selldorf and design consultants Atelier Ten, the five-story, 30,000-square-foot structure is built to museum standards and to accommodate large-scale installations and the full range of artists the gallery represents. The gallery is also the first known commercial art gallery built to LEED Gold standards.

The building incorporates five green roof spaces, premium efficiency mechanical, maximized daylighting, and locally and responsibly-sourced materials.

Sound business sense.

See:

Frick Collection Names Selldorf Architects for Its Renovation” | Robin Pogrebin, The New York Times, 20 October 2016

This Quietly Elegant Architect is Now the Darling of the Design World” | James Tarmy, Bloomberg, 5 June 2015

Protecting Priceless Art from Natural Disasters” | John Whitaker, The Atlantic, 27 May 2015

Annabelle Selldorf Designs the New David Zwirner Gallery” | Samuel Cochran, Architectural Digest, 30 April 2013

David Zwirner Opens New Manhattan Gallery” | Tamara Warren, Forbes, 29 January 2013

David Zwirner 20th Street,” New York, New York | Selldorf Architects

David Zwirner

Selldorf Architects | Architects

Atelier Ten | Environmental Design Consultants + Engineers

 

#art #artmarket #architecture #design #DavidZwirner #AnnabelleSelldorf #AtelierTen #WhitneyMuseum #Whitney #HurricaneSandy #climatechange #climaterisk #regulatoryrisk #marketadjustments #finance #LEED #LEEDGold

Denver tracks & publicly reports annual commercial & multi-family building energy performance data

A city ordinance adopted by the Denver City Council in late 2016 requires commercial and multi-family buildings of 25,000-square-feet and over to track and publicly report their annual energy performance.

The deadline for property owners of larger buildings (50,000+ square feet) to file 2016 energy benchmarking reports is June 1. There is a city 90-day grace period for filing, ending on September 1.

Owners of smaller buildings, of 25,000 – 50,000 square-feet, are required to file their energy performance reports by June 2018.

According to the city, 57 percent of Denver’s greenhouse gas emissions are generated by large commercial and multifamily buildings.

Katrina Managan, Senior Advisor, Energy Efficiency, Denver Department of Environmental Health, reports that ”there are approximately 2,400 buildings over 50,000 square feet that need to comply this first year.”

The city of Denver plans to publish building energy performance data annually.

See:

$2,000 penalty looms for Denver building owners who don’t say how much energy they’re using” | Adrian D. Garcia, Denverite, 11 July 2017

Colorado signs on to U.S. Climate Alliance, joining states committed to exceeding Trump’s rejected Paris climate targets” | Bruce Finley, Denver Post, 11 July 2017

Denver Imposes $2,000 Fine for Building Owners Who Don’t File Energy Benchmarking Reports” | Emily Holbrook, Energy Manager Today, 12 July 2017

#realestate #commercialrealestate #greenhousegasemissions #commercial #multi-family #energyefficiency #buildingenergyperformance #data #Denver #Colorado

valuing climate-related risks, investing well, & avoiding stranded assets

The Task Force on Climate-Related Financial Disclosures (TCFD, @FSB_TCFD) has published a new report on June 29. The report is published as part of a G20 initiative led by the governor of the Bank of England Mark Carney and the former mayor of New York City Michael Bloomberg.

The report provides a framework for companies to disclose in their financial filings all of their direct and indirect greenhouse gas emissions and describe the risks and opportunities caused by climate change under a range of potential scenarios. The objective of such disclosures would be to allow economies to properly value climate-related risks and to help minimize the risk, to investors, banks, and insurers, that market adjustments to climate change will be incomplete, late and potentially destabilizing.

Importantly, the report recommends that banks should disclose lending to companies with carbon-related risks.

Climate change presents global markets with risks and opportunities that cannot be ignored. The framework can be of assistance to investors (such as banks, pension funds, sovereign wealth funds, university endowments, investors in commercial real estate, and homeowners) as they evaluate the potential risks and rewards of a transition to a lower carbon economy and avoid investing in assets that might become stranded, non-performing (such as non-performing loans made to entities that are cash-strapped due to rising carbon costs or houses and buildings that themselves cannot perform and/or are difficult or impossible to sell).

While the report’s recommendations are intended to be adopted by all companies, extra guidance is given to the financial sector. Other sectors, likely to be most affected by climate change and/or the transition to a lower carbon economy, are also given extra guidance. The other sectors likely to be most affected by climate change and/or the transition to a lower carbon economy include energy, transportation, construction, and agriculture, food, and forestry.

Christian Thimann, Group Head of Regulation, Sustainability and Insurance Foresight, AXA Group and a member of the TCFD, observes that insurers “see the frequency and intensity of natural disasters linked to climate change augmenting every year.” “Insurers,” Dr. Thimann says,
consider a world of plus two degrees may still be insurable but a world of plus four degrees might not be.”

Dr. Thimann notes that while banks have a shorter outlook than insurers

  • Banks “too can use these recommendations because they will need to steer their lending between sectors aligned with a 2-degree world and sectors not aligned. They need to know which are the sectors with a high risk of stranded assets in the future and those with a low risk of stranded assets in the future.”

 

See:

Banks should disclose lending to companies with carbon-related risks” | Michael Slezak, The Guardian, 29 June 2017

#TCFD #MarkCarney #BankofEngland #NYC #MichaelBloomberg #climatechange #climaterisk #strandedassets #banks #investors #finance #insurance #AXA #lowcarboneconomy #energy #transportation #construction #agriculture #food #forestry#realestate #homeownership #museums #artcollections #art