Author: Kbaumlier

Kristen Baumlier’s work spans the full spectrum of interdisciplinary media, including performance, interactive installation, video and audio works.
Ecowatch.org, The Cuyahoga River, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. speaks

Ecowatch.org, The Cuyahoga River, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. speaks

Yesterday I went to a public event that celebrated the launch of Ecowatch’s new nationwide news service website.  EcoWatch, publisher of EcoWatch Journal which has a  distribution of more than 80,000 copies across Ohio,  launched its new nationwide news service which will be based in Cleveland.

The website—www.ecowatch.org—went live the morning of Oct. 27 and will  unite the voice of the grassroots environmental movement.  This will be the first media source to focus exclusively on environmental news from more than 700 environmental organizations across the country.

The site focuses on five critical issue areas—water, air, food, energy and biodiversity—and covers topics including renewable energy, water and air quality, sustainable agriculture, fossil fuel depletion, solution-based sustainability projects, species protection, global warming, climate change and pending legislation.

The site of the event was in Rivergate park, which is near the historic site where the Cuyahoga River caught on fire 42 years ago in June of 1969.  This event played a major role in starting  modern-day environmental movement and creation of the Clean Water Act.

The event started  with short speeches from Cleveland Mayor Frank Jackson; Cleveland City Councilman Joe Cimperman; the George Gund Foundation’s Senior Program Officer for the Environment, John Mitterholzer and the Cleveland Foundation’s Program Officer, Nelson Beckford.  The speakers commended the work that Ecowatch has done for Ohio, and talked about the potential that the new nationwide website will do for the country.  Joe Cimperman showed support for Cleveland saying that, “Cleveland is a place that learns, earns, and shows why the best is yet to come.”

The keynote speaker at the event was Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., founder and president of Waterkeeper Alliance.  Kennedy talked about how the environmental movement is not about protecting animals – but people.  He talked about how the parks, rivers, and waterways are assets of the community – and assets of the people.  “We don’t have to choose between good environmental policy and good economic policy – we can have both,” Kennedy stated. He then talked about how the environment is an investment and will create economic prosperity in the future.

He talked about the power of grassroots organizing – and talked about what it was like before Earth Day in 1970.  Lake Erie was called “dead,” you could not swim in the Hudson and other rivers, large cities had smog so bad that you would get black soot on your clothing, and most waterways were polluted.  He talked about the Cuyahoga River burning in Cleveland – and that this was the catalyst for 10 million people going out into the streets demanding rights to clean waterways and fisheries.

Kennedy mentioned throughout history – all tyrannies take away public access to wildlife and waterways – and that it is time for us to take this back.   He went to say, “At this time all of the Great Lakes have fish that are deemed to be uneatable, and we need to continue to fight the polluters!”

After the event, I was able to walk by the banks of  the Cuyahoga River in the park,  which had a quiet but strong presence at the event.

Links:

Ecowatch – www.ecowatch.org

Water Keeper Alliance

Rivergate Park

“Microtecture,” Off the Grid LED Lighting, and the Designers Accord Town Hall Meeting

“Microtecture,” Off the Grid LED Lighting, and the Designers Accord Town Hall Meeting

Last night I attended the first Designers Accord Town Hall meeting in Cleveland.  Hosted by  SmartShape Design, CIA, IDSA Northeast Ohio Chapter and AIGA Cleveland Chapter at the Cleveland Institute of Art, the event was intended to create discussion on how design can create positive environmental and social impact in the local community and beyond.

There were several presentations by designers in Cleveland which included David Levine of Wireless Environment ( a company focusing on off the grid LED lighting), King Heiple of Recharge Power (a company which produces products that are for recharging electric cars), PJ Doran, of APOC ( a group which rescues and upcycles good wood from houses) and F*SHO Collective (annual furniture show in the Cleveland area), and Doug Paige, from the Cleveland Institute of Art.

The presentations focused on presenting an overview of what the companies and groups did – and each presenter would end the presentation by framing  some key questions for discussion – which were to be discussed in later breakout sessions.

Some of the highlights of the night:

David Levine summary which included the questions, “ What if a light could go on and off the grid – like a laptop?  What can be wireless in 2015?  What if lights would store up power at night, when the cost of power is cheaper, and go off the grid during the day?”

PJ Doran presented about his current project in microtecture, trying to make small 150-200 square feet living spaces that are affordable, low-maintainance, that have a low impact on the land,  and can be moved.  His presentation was the most engaging of the night – and he showed several interesting examples of microtecture and presented the question, “How can we create creative sustainable, small living solutions?”

Doug Paige, who I work with at the Cleveland Institute of Art,  talked about a current group project he is a part of which is using biomimiciry o create solutions to the challenges of desalination of water.  (biomiciry is a process where models, systems and process of nature are examined to solve human problems.)   The project addresses the question of, “ How can we crate efficient, modular desalination systems that work with the principles or “rules” of nature?”

This was the first event organized by the Cleveland group of The Designers Accord – which is a global coalition of designers, educators, and business leaders working together to create positive environmental and social impact.  The group has a Design Education toolkit that you can view on the  site or download as a PDF.

I had to leave before the breakout and discussions began – but the information will be posted online at a later date- on the Designer Accord website  – presenting ideas about Cleveland, design, and sustainability and social impact.

LINKS:

The Designers Accord Site

IDSA Northeast Ohio Chapter

AIGA Cleveland Chapter

A Piece of Cleveland (APOC)

F*Sho Cleveland

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Eat your fruit – and wash it too…  the Vanishing Fruitwash Label

Eat your fruit – and wash it too… the Vanishing Fruitwash Label

Designer Scott Amron  has designed a “Vanishing Fruitwash Label.”

Instead of peeling off the label on a piece of produce and throwing it away ( or sticking it to your fridge) – you wash the apple, peach, or other piece of fruit and the label dissolves into an organic fruit cleansing produce wash that helps remove wax, pesticies, dirt and bacteria.

This is especially great for produce such as apples and peaches, which are usually sprayed with the most pesticides.

Vanishing Fruitwash Label

Scott Amron’s Site – www.amronexperimental.com

 

Image credit:  www.amronexperimental.com

 

 

 

 

After Coal:  Film project focuses on the transition from coal in Appalachia and Wales

After Coal: Film project focuses on the transition from coal in Appalachia and Wales

Tom Hansell, an artist and filmmaker I worked with as part of the artist group Fossil Fools has started a new film project called After Coal: Welsh and Appalachian Mining Communities

This documentary film explores how two mining cultures face the challenge of their dependence on fossil fuels.  Currently the Appalachian coalfields are struggling with chronic unemployment and environmental degradation, while Wales has experimented with strategies to rebuild their communities after the mines closed.  As the Appalachian coalfields enter their last generation of mining, this documentary project will help map directions to a sustainable future after coal.

Tom is currently raising money in order to bring a video crew from the Appalachian Mountains to the historic coalfields of South Wales.  Here they will revisit sites documented by Welsh Cinematographer Richard Greatrex and sociologists Helen Lewis and John Gaventa from 1974-1976.  During the last decade of full scale mining in Wales, this team made over 150 videotapes of daily life — including rare footage of Welsh miners choirs performing with Appalachian musicians such as Hazel Dickens and Alice Gerrard.

The interviews, images, and, sounds gathered will be combined with this archival footage, creating a feature length documentary that compares the coalfields of Wales and Appalachia. 

After Coal will consider what the Welsh experience after coal means for the last generation of Appalachian miners and their community. How do resource rich regions transition from their historic dependence on fossil fuels, while sustaining the community those fuels helped build? And, how can lessons from these areas speak to other resource dependent regions throughout the globe?

As of today – Tom has raised $2945 of the $5000 project goal.

The Center for Appalachian Studies at Appalachian State University is currently raising money to cover the costs of bringing a film crew to Wales in the spring of 2012.

To support this project, visit the website and click on the support button.

View the promo clip of the film

 

Image credit: Tom Hansell

 

Want to buy a energy smarthome?

Want to buy a energy smarthome?

The PNC ultra-high-tech SmartHome, which was constructed last spring on site at the Cleveland Museum of Natural History, moved yesterday to its permanent site on Wade Park Avenue and is for sale.  The house was put on a large flatbed – and was driven to its new location.

The Smart home is all-electric, but is designed to use 90% less heating and cooling energy than a typical home. While on site at CMNH, over 10,000 people toured the house.

The home was designed by Chuck Miller of Doty & Miller Architects in Cleveland. Certified Passive House Consultant Mark Hoberecht of HarvestBuild Associates will oversee SmartHome Cleveland’s adherence to the standards of the Passive House Institute US.

The home’s construction on its temporary site at the museum coincided with the exhibit on global climate change on display at the museum .  It also was timed with Cleveland’s 10-year campaign to remake the region’s economy through sustainable business practices which  named 2011 – the year of energy efficiency.

The super-energy efficient, two-story house is for sale and is listed with Howard Hanna for $329,000.

 View the house listing

Read more about the house on CMNH.org

Image credit : Lisa DeJohn, The Plain Dealer Monday October 24th