Sustainable_Cities_04_Gaylord_Opryland_Resort_Convention_Center

4 Convention Centers Making Strides in Sustainability

July 17, 2019

Want your facility to go green? Convention centers in Salt Lake City, Detroit, Nashville and New Orleans are making big strides in sustainability through environmentally friendly venue renovations and innovative initiatives. Learn more.

As climate change increasingly dominates the headlines, building owners and managers are seeking ways to reduce their carbon footprints and make their large facilities more sustainable.

Convention centers—some of the largest buildings in city centers—are leading the way by spearheading big renovations to make their facilities more environmentally friendly and adjusting their catering services, recycling and composting programs.

In turn, their efforts are having a ripple effect on surrounding metro areas. Four cities—Salt Lake City, Nashville, TN, Detroit and New Orleans—are making big strides in sustainability in 2019.

Consider these four sustainability-minded buildings’ initiatives as inspiration for your next project.

1. Salt Palace Convention Center, Salt Lake City

Just look around Salt Palace Convention Center, and you’ll notice the innovative ways it’s pushing its facility to be more sustainable.

(Photo: Salt Palace Convention Center Solar Panel Array)
  • There are over 6,000 solar panels on the roof, generating 17% of the building’s power. It’s one of the few convention centers in the country that generates Solar Renewable Energy Credits, which can be purchased by events to offset their carbon footprint.
  • Most existing lighting has been replaced with LED lights.
  • Water bottle filling stations and bike stations are sprinkled across facility grounds.

Sustainability has long been important to Salt Lake City, according to Chance Thompson, senior manager for sustainability and public relations and chairperson for the Green Team Committee at Salt Palace Convention Center. He is also vice chair of the Events Industry Council’s (EIC) 2019 Sustainability Committee and chair of its APEX/ASTM Relaunch Committee.

Christoph Trappe was on-site for sister publication Meetings Today. Check out his VR 360 video on the roof of the convention center:

As a result of a novel multiple-partner strategy spearheaded by Thompson, who also collaborates with venues across the country, Salt Lake City is the world’s only convention destination to hold five concurrent APEX/ASTM sustainability certifications in one shared partnership—the convention center, Mountain America Expo Center, Visit Salt Lake, Utah Food Services and PSAV.

Behind the scenes, Thompson explains that the center is constantly improving its recycling and composting programs, partnering with local businesses in Salt Lake City. As a result, the center has worked with over 100 different nonprofits in the community and donated over 500,000 pounds of event material since 2017.

VR 360 Video Tour: Sustainable Building Design in Salt Lake City from BOMA 2019

“Last year we hit a landfill diversion of 64% for the facility, and the goal this year is 75%,” Thompson says. “We are also doubling down on our zero-waste strategy. In that context, we do have an upcycling shop on site now. They take a lot of leftover scrap metal and woods from events, and they use it to reinforce our equipment. That has saved us a lot of money.”

2. Gaylord Opryland Resort and Convention Center, Nashville, TN

Nashville’s Music City Center was officially LEED Gold-certified in 2014. The center also has a four-acre green roof and impressive water conservation program. Their system collects rainwater and HVAC condensation to provide water for landscaping and for over 500 toilets and urinals in the building.

Following in the center’s footsteps, Nashville’s Gaylord Opryland Resort and Convention Center is making big moves toward sustainability. Michael O’Connor, director of event management, participated in the 2018 Sustainable Events Professional Course hosted by the EIC. There, O’Connor met Salt Palace Convention Center’s Chance Thompson.

(Photo: Gaylord Opryland Resort and Convention Center)

“Chance helped us set up our diversion tracker to help us better understand what waste we were diverting and where our opportunities were to be better,” O’Connor says. “Before, we didn’t track what we were doing. It’s pretty cool we are able to collaborate and share best practices with each other.”

From there, Gaylord Opryland has implemented a variety of changes:

  • Property-wide refreshment stops use compostable products like paper straws, eco-friendly cups and bamboo sticks.
  • Bars are working to provide wine and beer on draft to limit the amount of glass bottles, corks and cardboard cases.
  • Gaylord Opryland partnered with Nashville glass recycler Justice Industries three months ago, helping to recycle 7,500 pounds of glassware from events.
  • In August 2018, Gaylord Opryland partnered with a local compost company. Since then, 46,000 pounds of organic waste has been saved from event food prep scraps. Sometimes it gets sold back to the property and used for landscaping.
  • A third of the resort’s rooms are being renovated, and recycling bins are being added to each.
  • Local farmers grow food in onsite greenhouses, and there are 16 beehives on the property.

Gaylord Opryland also uses on-property wells for irrigation and its water-cooling systems to avoid tapping into city resources.

[On topic: Beehives for Green Roofs]

As it continues to push itself to be more sustainable, Gaylord Opryland is beginning to see more passion for green meetings from planners, making the facility renovations and project more worthwhile.

The resort is a Marriott property, which is pushing green initiatives at all its resorts.

“The Marriott Make a Green Choice Program is companywide,” O’Connor says. “A guest can opt to skip housekeeping services for that night. We do recognize these guests through Bonvoy points or the option to plant a tree.”

3. TCF Center, Detroit

Detroit has made major strides in sustainability in the past decade, and one could argue it all started with TCF Center, formerly known as Cobo Center.

From 2011 to 2015, the convention center invested roughly $400 million to transform it into a more updated, sustainable building, according to Claude Molinari, the center’s general manager.

(Photo: TCF Center Waste Diversion Stations)

“There was no green program whatsoever when I came to Detroit [in 2011]. Nothing was focused on sustainability,” Molinari says. “My first week here, I partnered with our marketing manager, and we started mapping out how we were going to make this place green. Since then, we have expanded and really the whole building is in sustainability drive.”

[Related: USGBC Opens Call for Proposals for Next Version of LEED]

In 2019, TCF Center announced it was recertified to the EIC’s APEX/ASTM Sustainable Meeting Standard for venues. Molinari adds that it’s also close to achieving LEED certification.

In June 2019, the convention center hosted the Sustainable Brands conference. TCF Center now sets the standard for sustainable buildings in Detroit.

 “One of the things people may not know much is the city of Detroit is working with LEED to become a green city, and we actually were the inspiration for this,” Molinari says. “The city council member who is in charge of the green effort in Detroit is constantly saying they want to emulate what [TCF Center] has done.”

(Photo: TCF Center Bee Keeping Program)

Molinari says some TCF Center’s sustainability initiatives also include:

  • Raising honeybees and growing herbs that are used in the center’s meals on its green roof.
  • Induction lighting in all exhibit halls, which has reduced energy consumption by 50%.
  • A robust recycling program, with paper, aluminum cans and plastic bottle recycling containers throughout its meeting spaces.

The city of Detroit’s Green Task Force, a group of businesses, non-profits and residents working to build a more sustainable Detroit, honored TCF Center with the “Earth Day Business Award” in 2019 for its sustainability efforts.

BUILDINGS Podcast

Carlisle Roofing Series #2: Roof Gardens

Vegetated roofs aren’t just beautiful—they’re valuable tools for managing stormwater, reducing the urban heat island effect, and providing more usable space for building occupants.

In the second installation of the Carlisle Roofing Series, BUILDINGS editor-in-chief Janelle Penny chats with Chris Kann, roof garden product manager for Carlisle, about best practices for green roof projects. Listen now >>

 “Anecdotally, we’ve heard, ‘you guys aren’t just talking about being green, you’re really living it,’” Molinari says. His team is constantly pushing new ideas and brainstorming ways to improve its green efforts.

TCF Center is even exploring the idea of rooftop hydroponics so it can produce even more onsite food for meetings.

4. Ernest N. Morial Convention Center, New Orleans

Ernest N. Morial Convention Center in New Orleans created the new assistant director of sustainability position for Art Schilling in the fall of 2018 to officially spearhead the facility’s sustainability initiatives.

Though the convention center began implementing its sustainability program in 2010, the recent move further solidified its commitment to going green.

(Photo: Ernest N. Memorial Convention Center Exterior at Night)

Now, the staff tracks metrics of electricity; gas and water consumption; and all recycling, solid waste and edible food donations.

“We also make some of the cheapest chilled water in town,” Schilling says, explaining the building’s chilled water optimization program that reduces the energy consumption of the cooling plant while keeping event spaces cool. “We have cut our cost and energy consumption for the cooling of this building by 25%.”

The convention center’s commitment is inspiring the city of New Orleans to go green, too.

“We started composting with The Composting Network in 2012,” said Paul O’Connell, director of capital projects for Ernest N. Morial Convention Center. “Recently, Mercedes-Benz Stadium signed on with them in addition to 30 hotels, the Superdome and Smoothie King Center.”

Additionally, Ernest N. Morial recently partnered with the city’s CVB, New Orleans & Company, to form “Green Hospitality NOLA,” a joint effort aiming to assist in helping New Orleans tourism and the hospitality industry become more sustainable.

(Photo: Ernest N. Memorial Convention Center Exhibit Hall Lighting)

“We recently completed our first survey of approximately 200 hotels in New Orleans to see what sustainability is currently in place,” Schilling says. From there, Green Hospitality NOLA can identify the need for assistance with sustainability issues and program development in the surveyed hotels.

“It was a great response—the community wants to go green,” he added. “We are planning on surveying the area’s restaurants next.”

On site, the convention center team hopes to achieve LEED certification and has big ideas for what they could do next, including preliminary planning for installing solar panels on their 44-acre roof that could generate 9.8 megawatts of electricity, according to O’Connell.

“We are full speed ahead with these initiatives, and we are not letting off the pedal at all,” says Adam Straight, vice president of operations at Ernest N. Morial Convention Center.

Going Green Together

Salt Palace Convention Center’s Thompson has spoken with other convention centers around the country, sharing what Salt Palace is doing to make its facility greener. To him, when it comes to sustainability, swapping ideas and sharing innovative solutions is a win not just for individual buildings but for everyone.

“We are all competitors, but we are one big team when it comes to protecting our future,” he notes.

Two handpicked articles to read next:

About the Author

Danielle LeBreck | Lead Destinations Content Strategist

Danielle started at Meetings Today, a sister publication of BUILDINGS, in March 2019 after seven years of editorial experience in the travel and food industries. She also uses her expertise to produce content geared toward property owners and buildings managers.

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