The Denver Post

Constructi­on waste gets new life in the garden

- By Jane Margolies

NEW YORK>> Constructi­on waste has long been a bane of ecological­ly minded architects. So a trio of designers zeroed in on what they felt was a particular­ly egregious example: the “architectu­ral mock- up.”

Created before constructi­on starts on a large real estate developmen­t, a mock- up is a one- to threestory model of a facade, often including windows, part of a roof and other features. It is used to test a design before embarking on a project, but afterward, it often ends up in a garbage heap.

“These are brand- new, highly sophistica­ted, incredibly intelligen­t assemblage­s ready to have a new life,” said Ivi Diamantopo­ulou, an architect who, with her partner Jaffer Kolb, founded New Affiliates, a boutique design firm in Manhattan.

They teamed up with Samuel Stewart- Halevy, a doctoral student in architectu­ral history at Columbia University, to repurpose the structures for practical purposes in community gardens around New York. Their program, called Testbeds, recently completed its pilot project — a jazzy new shelter in a garden on the Rockaway peninsula in Queens — and they hope the example will spur others to find new uses for mock- ups, thus diverting them from landfills.

But it remains to be seen whether Testbeds can be scaled up in a cost- effective program — and whether repurposin­g mock- ups can make a dent in the real estate industry’s mountain of waste.

“The problem is enormous,” said Felix Heisel, an assistant architectu­re professor at Cornell University and director of its Circular Constructi­on Lab. “And one of the real problems is that very few people are aware of it.”

Across the country, 600 million tons of waste is generated in the constructi­on and demolition of buildings and infrastruc­ture, according to a 2018 estimate from the Environmen­tal Protection Agency. New York state alone produced more than 15 million tons of the stuff in 2019, according to the state’s Department of Environmen­tal Conservati­on. A 2003 report indicated that constructi­on and demolition waste accounted for 60% of New York City’s waste stream.

“For every bag of garbage people put out on the curb, the constructi­on industry is producing twice as much waste,” Heisel said.

At a time when Tiktok videos of dumpster diving are calling attention to discards, efforts have sprung up to salvage materials from renovation­s and demolition­s so that they can be repurposed. And there is a movement to design buildings that can be disassembl­ed, with their parts reused, as part of an effort to bring about a “circular economy,” a model that focuses on recycling resources.

But waste is generated at the beginning of a building’s life, too, and architectu­ral mock- ups are a prime example of how valuable resources are squandered in the constructi­on process, Heisel said, pointing to the labor that goes into making the materials, not to mention the climatewar­ming carbon produced in their manufactur­e and transport.

Mock- ups, which are a fraction of the size of the buildings they are made for, are often designed by architects and consultant­s and can cost hundreds of thousands of dollars, industry experts say.

There are two types. The first is a visual mock- up, which is made to try out custom finishes and features and get a sense of how everything will look together on the building; they are sometimes erected right on a constructi­on site.

The second type, a performanc­e mock- up, is built to see how a structure will hold up under use. At testing facilities, they are blasted with water and air to simulate harsh weather and subjected to other trials. In what’s sometimes called a mob test, they may be attacked with baseball bats. After tests are completed, they are often thrown out.

“Right at the moment they prove the building facade system will work, they’re rendered completely useless,” StewartHal­evy said.

He and his colleagues are not the only ones who see reuse potential in mock- ups. In Senegal, one from a hospital project was repurposed into a grade school.

Testbeds designers zeroed in on garden structures after noticing that the casitas and toolsheds in green spaces around New York were about the same size as mock- ups. In 2018, they pitched their reuse concept to the Department of Parks and Recreation’s Greenthumb program, which oversees more than 550 community gardens run by volunteers on city- owned lots throughout the five boroughs.

Carlos Martinez, GreenThumb’s director, was enthusiast­ic about the idea, which he said was “in the

spirit of community gardens,” in which volunteers often cobble together makeshift benches, trellises and various types of structures with whatever materials are on hand.

The Testbeds team identified a facade fragment for the pilot project — a visual mock- up made for 30 Warren, a luxury condo in Tribeca designed by Francois Leininger, Line Fontana and David Fagart. Measuring 21 feet by 10 feet, the mock- up incorporat­ed panels of tinted high- performanc­e concrete that had been poured into molds lined with corrugated cardboard for texture; the panels surrounded a big window set in a frame of Champagnec­olored anodized aluminum.

The condo’s developer, Cape Advisors, had installed the mock- up in 30 Warren’s sales gallery to help prospectiv­e buyers visualize what the building would look like, said David Kronman, the firm’s president. Once the condo units were sold and the sales gallery closed, Cape Advisors

helped arrange storage of the mock- up for Testbeds.

Mar tinez introduced the designers to organizers who had been working to start a community garden on a weedy vacant lot in the low- income neighborho­od of Edgemere in the Rockaways.

“We wanted a greenhouse, a classroom, a space that could be used when the weather was bad,” said Alexis Smallwood- Foote, one of the garden organizers and a longtime resident of Far Rockaway.

Completed in August, the modernist structure consists of three rooms under a common roof that also shades outdoor space. The mock- up provided the facade for the largest room, its window bringing light to that space. The rest of the structure was built from off- the- shelf materials such as pressuretr­eated lumber for framing and corrugated metal for the roof.

The project has garnered recognitio­n — it will be part of an exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art — but there are financial hurdles to overcome before Testbeds can be rolled out more broadly.

The designers raised the $ 70,000 needed for the shelter through grants, private donations and inkind contributi­ons. They hope to secure a funding stream for future garden structures — one idea is to have the developer donating a mock- up pay for the entire conversion project. Because the size and design of future structures will depend on the needs of gardeners and site conditions, costs will vary.

On a recent morning in the Garden by the Bay, as the Edgemere garden is called — where sea gulls swooped and, farther overhead, planes ascended from nearby Kennedy Internatio­nal Airport — volunteers greeted the designers with hugs and spoke to visitors of their plans.

Jackie Rogers, an Edgemere homeowner who has become the garden’s president, said volunteers wanted to get electricit­y to the new building for cooking demonstrat­ions with the produce they were growing, and they have envisioned putting on puppet shows using the large window opening from the mock- up for the stage.

Heisel of Cornell applauded the way the designers had turned something destined for the dump into a community asset. But he also said mock- ups themselves should be rethought. If they were designed to be broken down with their parts reused in the building to be constructe­d, the structures could reduce waste and provide a “trial run” for how the building could one day be disassembl­ed.

“The mock- up can become a new tool that foresees a circular economy,” he said.

 ?? DESIREE RIOS — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Laquetta Little, left, and Alexis Smallwood- Foote, organizers of a community garden in Edgemere, a neighborho­od on the Rockaway peninsula in Queens, N. Y., on Oct. 18. A new program to reuse architectu­ral mock- ups in community gardens is gaining interest as a way to keep them out of the landfill.
DESIREE RIOS — THE NEW YORK TIMES Laquetta Little, left, and Alexis Smallwood- Foote, organizers of a community garden in Edgemere, a neighborho­od on the Rockaway peninsula in Queens, N. Y., on Oct. 18. A new program to reuse architectu­ral mock- ups in community gardens is gaining interest as a way to keep them out of the landfill.

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