

More recently, the Bronx Zoo has expanded its mission of conservation and education to include its facilities. In the fall of 2006, the Zoo finished work on its new Eco-Restroom at the Bronxdale Gate entrance, which was designed to accommodate more than half a million visitors annually. The Eco-Restroom replaces an older restroom building which according to Jon Dohlin, the Zoo’s Project Manager for Capital Construction, had fallen into disrepair and had been closed due to concern over its failing septic system’s potential to pollute the Bronx River.
For these reasons, the WCS and the design team decided the new restroom should be an example of how to manage human waste sustainably, conserve resources, and prevent pollution. It was determined that key to reaching these aims was to use composting toilets and greywater irrigation systems for the project. This means that the Eco-Restroom is not connected to the City’s sewer system. Instead, toilet waste is collected in the compost system and water from sinks and drinking fountains (greywater) is used to irrigate plants outside the structure. The resulting model of sustainability sharply contrasts with the problems associated with big city sewage treatment systems, such as New York’s.

But as good as the Mayor’s plan may be, at the Bronx Zoo they’re really getting to the root of the sewage treatment problem. Since the compost toilets at the Zoo are completely independent of the sewer, they offer no opportunity for human waste to be mixed with toxic waste substances from industry, which are regularly dumped into the sewer, and which remain in the sludge end-product of the sewage treatment plant. Sludge (sometimes given the nicer-sounding name “biosolids”) is used as fertilizer for food crops or is added to potting soil or compost sold at the local garden store! Heavy metals and chemicals, such as dioxin, are kept out of the compost toilet and its fertilizer end-products.

The Clivus Multrum Greywater Irrigation System collects water from the restroom’s non-toilet fixtures in a small tank in the basement and sends it into an 80’x 20’ flower garden. The greywater is distributed through buried half-round pipes into the garden’s root zone, where plants use the water and the small amount of nutrients contained in the water from soap. Because greywater is used for plant irrigation and toilet wastes are contained in the composters, there is no pollution discharge, as is the case in buildings with septic systems.
In addition to composting toilets and greywater systems, the Eco-Restroom uses a rainwater harvesting system to keep stormwater onsite and out of the sewer. Janine Sutton, a representative from Edelman Sultan Knox Wood Architects, the firm responsible for design of the Eco-Restroom, says the system collects rainwater from the roof in large barrels and redirects it into the garden so that it can be used by plants instead of running off into storm drains. And besides addressing wastewater issues, the designers also included technologies designed to cut energy use and built in an educational component as well.
The Eco-Restroom saves energy by making optimal use of natural daylighting through the positioning of four 30-foot skylights. Supplemental light (though rarely needed) comes from high-efficiency CFL bulbs, and a radiant floor heating system cuts energy use even further. And Sutton adds, “Besides being a restroom, it’s also an exhibit.” In addition to the various ‘green’ building technologies, visitors to the Eco-Restroom will also notice a variety of signage designed to explain the technologies and educate people of all ages about the environmental issues that the Eco-Restroom seeks to address.
The Eco-Restroom, though, is not a one-off example of green building at the Zoo. Dohlin says they are currently at work on two more eco-friendly buildings—both of which will go for LEED certification. The new Lion House building will go for LEED Gold and the Center for Global Conservation, which will house the WCS international department and function as a conference center, will go for Silver. Such commitment as shown by the WCS to sustainable building practice demonstrates its concern not just for wildlife but for the entire animal kingdom.


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