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ALBION DISTRICT LIBRARY BY PERKINS + WILL IS A 2018 COTE TOP TEN RECIPIENT. IMAGE: DOUBLESPACE PHOTOGRAPHY

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The Committee on the Environment (COTE®) is an AIA Knowledge Community working for architects, allied professionals, and the public to achieve climate action and climate justice through design. We believe that design excellence is the foundation of a healthy, sustainable, and equitable future. Our work promotes design strategies that empower all AIA members to realize the best social and environmental outcomes with the clients and the communities they serve.

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  • 1.  Prairie Burns

    Posted 04-13-2022 09:04 AM
    I've been communicating with a City Councilman and a private individual about their prairie burns on their properties.  Does anyone know of scientific data about the carbon emissions from those burns?  One analysis suggests the burn improves the prairie plantings' ability to store carbon and that somehow, eventually there's a net reduction of carbon in the air after the burn.  Maybe this is a question for our friends on the ASLA side.
    thanks, Russ Ver Ploeg,  AIA, LEED AP

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    Russell Ver Ploeg AIA
    Ver Ploeg Architecture
    Des Moines IA
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  • 2.  RE: Prairie Burns

    Posted 04-18-2022 02:44 PM
    I forwarded your question to someone who has been involved with Prairie Burns for several years in Wisconsin, and he sent this response:

    That's a good question, though the consensus is that a given prairie annually sequesters far more carbon in the soils than is released during when it is burned.  https://bwsr.state.mn.us/carbon-sequestration-grasslands   Here's a more generic article from the Washington Post [it might be behind a paywall] https://www.washingtonpost.com/climate-solutions/2020/08/19/climate-change-prairie/  And a blog from someone I follow, carbon-sequestration.  Periodic burning is necessary to "maintain" a prairie and encourage new growth.  And if you want to know more than you need to about carbon sequestration, here's a document from the USDA, https://www.fs.usda.gov/sites/default/files/fs_media/fs_document/update-considering-forestandgrassland-carbonin-landmanagement-508-61517.pdf  Take a look at pages 30 and 31 for info on prairies.  Forests also sequester carbon but given the slow growth of trees, when they burn it is a different story than with prairie plants.  And of course clearing and burning forests to create cropland, as in the Amazon, has very detrimental affects on the climate.

    In the one-picture-is-worth-a-thousand-words category, this drawing is reproduced in hundreds if not thousands of articles and books on prairies.  It's those roots that do all the work of carbon sequestration.  The above ground portions of prairie plants are nothing like what's below.

     

    But to specifically answer the question, I can't find definitive research.  I'm sure someone's working on it, but it's complicated.  It really comes down to, if you want a prairie you have to use fire.



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    David Fridlund AIA
    Wirt Design Group Inc.
    Los Angeles CA
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