
The new 15,830-square-foot Queens Botanical Garden Visitor & Administration Center is the first building in New York City deigned to achieve a platinum LEED rating from the U.S. Green Building Council. The pioneering green building incorporates a jaw-dropping amalgam of green design elements including both geothermal and solar energy technologies, a graywater system that naturally filters rainwater for its central fountain, native plants and flowers sprouting from a living roof, and a hefty smattering of highly efficient HVAC, lighting and passive design components.

Integrating seamlessly into the day to day operation of the Botanical Gardens, these model green design elements, from the water-conserving bioswales to the composting toilets, might have gone undiscovered by garden visitors if not for an interactive web-based display and kiosk from the clean energy monitoring leaders at Fat Spaniel Technologies. The Silicon Valley-based team turned the building’s raw energy and sustainable design data into a green building showcase worthy of Queens Botanical Gardens’ extraordinary efforts.

Fat Spaniel takes the garden’s online and in-person visitors on a comprehensive virtual tour of the center’s many sustainable construction features and associated benefits to the environment in Chinese, Korean, Spanish, and English. Central to Fat Spaniel’s solution for Queens Botanical Garden are the building’s renewable energy systems, which harness clean power from both solar electric and geothermal sources. Visitors to the garden are invited to navigate through an instructive experience that highlights the design and function of the entire clean energy system, from real-time solar energy generation to wind speed, all with a just a few touches of the screen.

“Fat Spaniel’s stunning interactive visuals make our hard work and innovative approach to green building accessible to our visitors while providing us with the critical information we need to ensure that we keep our renewable energy system operating at peak performance,” said Jennifer Ward Souder, director of capital projects for the Queens Botanical Garden.
To see the Fat Spaniel display in action, please visit: http://view2.fatspaniel.net/FST/Portal/QBG/.


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