March-April 2010

Baltimore's Golden Achievers

A watershed headquarters goes green with LEED.

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Photo: @iStockphoto.com/tiero

By David C. Richardson

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On the approach to the northeastern outskirts of Baltimore, MD, half-rented strip-malls and defunct car dealerships alternate with stretches of modest row homes and mom-and-pop convenience stores. Well-kept porches sport a rainbow assortment of hanging flowers. On the tiny lawns, irises and day lilies jostle for a glimpse of summer sun, while a few feet away, cars, transit buses, and delivery trucks rush by, following historic Route 1 from the city center to the farthest suburbs.

Amid the din of traffic along Baltimore’s Belair Road corridor, however, it’s not unusual, when the weather is nice, to see children playing jump rope or riding bicycles on a side street; a block over, teenage boys might be seen running intense football scrimmages over the blacktop.

Through the center of it all flows Herring Run, ensconced within a strip of urban woodland that would have done the Olmstead brothers proud.

But it hasn’t always been that way.

During the 1970s, “It was basically a ditch running through fields,” says Sarah Bur, who sits on the Herring Run Watershed Association’s (HRWA’s) board of directors. “The Park has changed a lot as a result of the work of the Herring Run Watershed Association. The riparian buffer was all planted by the association over a number of years.”

The association serves to protect a 41-square-mile watershed while helping to educate 50 watershed communities in the care of their water resources. Two blocks south of the stream, near the crest of a rise that falls to its bank, you’ll find the row home that houses HRWA’s headquarters. The organization recently received Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) Gold Certification for its newly renovated headquarters. Mary Roby, the group’s executive director, says it was not only dream come true, but a chance to put in practice what the association has been preaching over more than a decade.

Photo: Mary Roby
The HRWA headquarters building before renovation began

On the scorching mid-June afternoon when I visited the headquarters building, the thermostat in the foyer read a comfortable 76 degrees. Roby apologized for the chill, explaining that Baltimore’s mayor, Sheila Dixon, had just adjourned a press conference in the next room announcing a federal stimulus-fund grant for a citywide weatherization program. With 60 guests crowding the meeting space, Roby says, she thought it best to cool things down a bit. But lately, she adds, such crowds are becoming commonplace around the office. Since receiving LEED certification, “We’re kind of the go-to green building,” she says. “If somebody has a green program or event they want to announce, and they want to do it in a green building, they can
come here.

“We’ve had architects, landscape architects, members of the Green Building Council, business people, community people—people are very keen on what’s going on in this building.”

House Hunting
Roby had the group’s community centered-orientation in mind in 2005, when the association began the search for a new location for its headquarters. HRWA had lost its lease on a building along busy Harford Road, just two blocks from the stream. “We spent several months looking for a place to rent along the Harford Road–Belair Road corridor,” she recalls. “We wanted to be on a major thoroughfare within the watershed, but couldn’t find anything that met our needs. Everything was either too small or too expensive, or there was some problem.”

Eventually, the association found a building at the corner of Belair Road and Pelham Avenue—fortuitously, again just a stone’s throw from the creek. The building had formerly housed a small industrial bakery that supplied pizza shells for restaurants. Although structurally sound, the two-story row house required considerable work to fulfill the group’s needs. Nevertheless, HRWA purchased the building, the staff moved in and resumed work, and Roby began planning the renovation.

Aside from a businesslike front office, there was little about the building to suit it to a community-focused watershed group. The mechanical, plumbing, and electrical systems were inefficient, outmoded, and decrepit. On the second floor where the staff worked, cramped and dilapidated apartments painted a dreary picture of hard times for the previous occupants. At the rear of the building, an industrial kitchen and loading bay were of dubious utility to community activists on a mission to protect the nearby stream. Next Page >

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