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September 18, 2013 THE VILLADOM TIMES I • Page 13
Bolger Community Center earns ‘green building’ award
Bolger Community Center earns ‘green
building’ award
Midland Park’s Bolger Community
Center on the Marlow Park property at
445Godwin Avenue, will receive a special
award from the U.S. Green Building Coun-
cil’s New Jersey Chapter at an Oct. 9 gala at
the NJ Performing Arts Center in Newark.
Due to open at the end of this year, the
center is being recognized in the USGBC
NJ’s not-for-profit commercial category.
“We are proud of this award. It is our
hope that this project will help inspire
others to rethink their projects and work
toward more ‘green’ buildings,” said JT
Bolger, president of the Bolger Foundation,
which is providing the funding. “Non-prof-
its that own buildings should see this as a
way to help them lower operating costs and
in turn free up more dollars to put towards
their mission,” he added. His father, David
Bolger, inspired the project.
Project Architect Patrick LaCorte of
Peter Wells Architecture, submitted the
successful application.
“The project is a wonderful combination
of philanthropy, preservation, and green
building design,” LaCorte told the USGBC
NJ Nominating Committee. “The building
is a landmark barn structure that is being
rehabilitated into a much needed new facil-
ity for the Midland Park Ambulance Corps
and community meeting space for the Bor-
ough of Midland Park.
The Ridgewood-based Bolger Foun-
dation purchased the building, hired an
architect and engineers to design the reha-
bilitation, and is paying the entire cost of
the project, LaCorte noted. Upon comple-
tion of the construction, the building will
be donated to the borough.
According to LaCorte, JT Bolger
directed the design team to utilize an energy
efficient geothermal system for heating and
cooling the building and to seek a minimum
of LEED Silver Certification. The building
was designed to be energy and water effi-
cient, and the team worked to maximize
indoor air quality, and to maximize the use
of locally harvested and high-recycled con-
tent materials and certified wood.
“The team packed the exterior walls and
roof with foam and fiber insulation and
specified LED light fixtures in as many
areas of the building as possible,” LaCorte
said. “As a result of this strategy, the build-
ing was awarded all 19 of 19 LEED Energy
& Atmosphere energy optimization points.
The architect said the building will be
a “role model to the community” as it will
be reinvented as a community building, but
will still be preserved as a landmark. He
pointed to the use of repurposed timbers as
decorative ceiling beams and wood siding
as window and door casing and wall base.
La Corte said the building would serve
as an example of how sustainable build-
ings can reduce energy and operating costs
and therefore taxpayer dollars. He said the
majority of light fixtures are LED for maxi-
mum energy efficiency, and are controlled
by occupancy sensors for minimum energy
use. “In addition, the building will have
low VOC carpeting, and no-VOC paints,
demonstrating that these types of healthy,
sustainable finishes are now readily avail-
able in the marketplace and contribute to a
healthier interior environment,” he said.
The converted barn structure is two sto-
ries and 6,000 square feet. Plans call for
the first floor to be used for the ambulance
corps’ vehicle storage, dispatch, business
offices, and meeting space. The second
floor will contain a 1,500 square foot meet-
ing room. Accessory spaces for the meeting
room include a commercial-grade kitchen,
barrier-free bathrooms, and storage space.
“The meeting room is located in the
upper loft of the barn and will maintain the
loft’s cathedral ceiling, exposing most of
the existing wood wall and roof timbers,”
the architect stated. “In order to make the
building fully handicapped accessible, a
new elevator will be inserted. Much of the
building has been reinforced with steel and
engineered wood members to bring it up to
current-day structural code requirements.”