From the Blog
Sage sprouts new solar panels
No, those aren’t spaceships hovering over the parking lot at Sage Hall. The University of Wisconsin Oshkosh’s six-month-old, $48 million, sustainably designed and built academic building has sprouted three new solar arrays in its parking lot. The technology was installed April 27. The photovoltaic solar panels, which resemble flower petals on stalks, will convert the [...]
Read MoreDan Dallich receives EDAC accreditation
In December, 2011, the vice president of Berners Schober, Dan Dallich passed his Evidence-based Design Accreditation and Certification exam. Dan is one of many at Berners Schober that has enthusiastically embraced emerging design methodologies including EBD and LEED. Evidence based design (EBD) is the process of basing decisions about the built environment on credible research [...]
Read MoreSage Hall to Receive The Wisconsin Masonry Association’s Excellence in Masonry Award
The University of Wisconsin – Oshkosh’s Sage Hall (VOA/BSA 2011) Receives The Wisconsin Masonry Association’s Excellence In Masonry Award The masonry (Endicott Medium Ironspot #46) was chosen for its intrinsic beauty and for its resemblance to the brick of the Neo-Gothic 1918 Dempsey Hall, an early academic building on the UW Oshkosh campus. Dempsey Hall [...]
Read MoreBerners-Schober celebrates our clients’ recent successes
Berners-Schober is pleased to highlight the recent honors awarded to three of our clients, the City of Green Bay, the Salvation Army, and the University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh. The City of Green Bay and Berners-Schober have been recognized by the Daily Reporter as part of their annual Top Projects 2011 [...]
Read MoreBerners Schober designs solar water heating system for UW Oshkosh
Berners Schober, a leader in sustainable building design and energy-efficient technologies, recently designed the solar water heating system for UW Oshkosh. Hot Water Products, Inc. assisted in the implementation of the thermal heating technology. This new system, which was put online in late 2011, will save the UW system thousands of dollars per year in [...]
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