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New Vegas PBS facility to run green

Educational Technology Campus embodies energy efficiency







Coveted parking spaces are no longer just for the handicapped or employees of the month.

The new building for Vegas PBS, KLVX-TV, Channel 10, has 28 parking spaces for hybrid vehicles and another 11 spots for car-poolers.


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  • By providing incentives for fuel efficiency, the TV studio and public school facility will accrue credit toward a gold classification under the U.S. Green Building Council's Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design standards.

    The total, all-inclusive price tag for the Vegas PBS Educational Technology Campus, 3050 Flamingo Road at McLeod Drive, is $60 million, but Vegas PBS Manager Tom Axtell notes that it was built with efficiency in mind.

    "It's my personal belief, but I think energy costs will skyrocket in the future, especially when this recession is over," Axtell said. "The last thing I want to do as the general manager of a nonprofit is to hold a pledge drive to pay down our utility bill."

    Conservation and environmental design features account for 6 percent, $2.7 million, of the $45 million construction costs. Axtell estimates the payback will be six years or less because of savings from reduced energy costs.

    Solar panels are expected to provide 15 percent of the building's power. Geothermal wells will cool the air. Systems are in place to reduce water consumption and shade the building from too much sunlight.

    Public transportation is accommodated with a convenient bus stop.

    There is a bicycle rack by the front door for bicycle commuters, who can wash off sweat in showers that will also serve TV performers freshening up for broadcast.

    Built to surpass the standards of California's earthquake building code, the rectangular building "will sway as a block during an earthquake and retain its structural integrity," Axtell predicted.

    Because it has its own fuel tank, Vegas PBS could operate for a week if power was cut off. The facility is expected to serve as a county communications relay center in the event of a natural catastrophe or terrorist attack.

    The project is a joint venture of the Clark County School District and Vegas PBS because half of the 112,000-square-foot building will house the district's online education facilities and virtual high school. Students will frequent the center to meet teachers, perform lab experiments and participate in group activities.

    The school district is funding its $30 million portion with proceeds from the school construction bond passed in 1998, which will be depleted in 2010. Vegas PBS has raised $18 million by leasing broadcast spectrum space to cell phone companies and the other $12 million from a capital campaign.

    The facility won't open to the public until August. For those who want a sneak peek or want to help pay down the cost of a solar panel, tickets of $150 apiece can be purchased to a 40th anniversary celebration of Vegas PBS on April 4.

    Because the building is considered school property, the Clark County School Board had to pass an exemption before alcohol could be served in the studio during PBS fundraisers.

    The Northwest Career & Technical Academy, 8200 W. Tropical Parkway, meets the basic standards of a green building. Because of higher costs, school buildings are not built to the same gold standard specifications as Vegas PBS, district officials said.

    Green design elements are incorporated when feasible. Geothermal wells 300 feet deep, for instance, are being dug for the new West Career and Technical Academy. The school on Charleston Boulevard just west of the Las Vegas Beltway is scheduled to open in fall 2010. The campus will also feature natural, desert landscaping.

    The Vegas PBS building design is so innovative that educators consider it a teaching tool.

    The vocational "students will be studying their own building," said Michael Rodriguez, a district spokesman.

    Contact reporter James Haug at jhaug@ reviewjournal.com or 702-374-7917.

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    deanna wrote on April 03, 2009 09:27 PM: well let's be fair PBS does have more informative programs than prime time stations but 60 million ??? WHY??TO save energy OR did you get a big grant to go green ?? VEGAS seems to love to spend millions even billions on FANCY buildings??its not the buildings that impress most people ?
    it is what goes on inside the buildings ?
    how many PEOPLE can find GOOD jobs inside a building? and WHAT the facility DOES to make the quality of life better for THE AVERAGE AMERICAN!
    I do not think being energy efficient
    is impressive enough to justify 60 mill


    deanna yoakum wrote on April 03, 2009 09:21 PM: I love PBS ! WAS this building paid for by donations from supporters? will IT BE a school/tv station ? what is to become of the old facility? AND will there be classes for education at this
    location and if so what kind and what are the requirements to register ?? all of these things is what i wish you would write about instead of the specs of the building


    Virga wrote on March 18, 2009 04:50 PM: This is great privlidged parking for people who can afford hybrids.

    PBS is the most obviously racist propaganda I haver watched.

    White people begging for money for a tax supported station. The sole purpose of this station seems to be included in any program a section where blacks were mistreated.

    Why English comedy? It is an American Station paid for by American people America has comics.

    I guess we should never tire of watching MLK marching thru Georgia.


    Viking wrote on March 18, 2009 11:56 AM: Green my ass. Anyone who lives in the surrounding neighborhood can tell you this construction project has been a hive of heavy machinery belching plumes of diesel exhaust into our air for going on two years now.


    GladK wrote on March 18, 2009 11:54 AM: Brilliant. After all, people aren't already watching enough television. Just what Las Vegas needs, a fancy TV studio when our actual schools are decrepit. I shudder to think what actual education $60 million would have bought for our community, instead of this obvious vanity project. How the hell can our school district come up with all the $$ to staff this fancy facility, when they are simultaneously asking schoolteachers to take a pay cut.


    Ken wrote on March 18, 2009 08:45 AM: It is great to see the station manager spending so much money upfront to save a few bucks in the future. This will guarantee that we will see reruns of "Are you Being Served" for decades to come.

    Thank you, eco-warrior.