
REFERENCE
1 Literature
[1] Deru, M., Torcellini, P., & Ellis, P. (2005). Analysis of the Energy Performance of the Chesapeake Bay Foundation's Philip Merrill Environmental Center. National Renewable Energy Laboratory.
[2] Heerwagen, J. U. D. I. T. H., & Zagreus, L. (2005). The human factors of sustainable building design: post occupancy evaluation of the Philip Merrill Environmental Center.
[3] Deru, M., Griffith, B., Long, N., Pless, S., Judkoff, R., & Crawley, D. B. (2006). Lessons learned from field evaluation of six high-performance buildings. National Renewable Energy Laboratory.
[4] Richard Lacayo. (2002). Buildings That Breathe – The best of the new architecture uses nature instead of fighting it. TIME.
[5] Good Design – And Good Business. (2001). Business Week.
[6] Resting lightly on the Land – Novel Materials and Exceptional Teamwork Give Birth to the World’s Greenest Office Building. (2001). Building Design & Construction.
[7] Zachman. (2000). Will A Deeper Shade of Green. Environmental Design & Construction.
[8] LEEDing the Way. (2001). Landscape Architecture.
[9] Torcellini, Paul; Judkoff, Ron; Crawley, Dru. (2004). High-Performance Buildings. ASHRAE Journal Vol. 46, No.9 p. S4.
[10] McKee, Bradford. (2001). the Green Machine. Architecture Magazine.
[11] Bonda, Penny. (2001). the Greenest Building in the Nation. Interiors & Sources Magazine.
[12] The Greenest Office on the Bay. (2001). Architectural Record.
[13] Chang, J.-C. (2002). Case Studies of Naturally Ventilated Commercial Buildings in the United States. MSc Thesis. Cambridge, MA: Department of Mechanical Engineering. Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
2 Website
Owner Office
Building Database
3 Video
[1] CBF's Philip Merrill Environmental Center https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_FeabEC8J0A
[2] Regeneration Road trip: Philip Merrill Environmental Center https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Md-WZiyTWpI