Jan
December 24th, 2004, 06:59 PM
March 11, 2005. Conference on “Birds & Buildings: Creating a Safer Environment” will be the first public meeting anywhere to address the building glass and window design features that are associated with the deaths of almost one billion birds each year in the U.S. Registration is $95; $45 for university students. To register: http://www.birdsandbuildings.org.
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That's quite a number. It's a typical aspect of skyscrapers that is being overlooked. Google (http://www.google.com/search?q=birds+and+buildings&sourceid=mozilla-search&start=0&start=0&ie=utf-8&oe=utf-8&client=firefox-a&rls=org.mozilla:en-US:official) has quite some info about the subject as well.
Olaf Tryggvason
December 25th, 2004, 12:13 AM
Is this really a serious issue? I like animals as much as the next guy but I don't think it's worth wasting money to research how to save some birds. What next, flies?
Maybe they could just not clean the windows as often, would that cause birds to not crash into them?
BulldozerGirl
December 25th, 2004, 01:32 AM
Hmm.. I actually thought the topic would be about birds damaging buildings instead of the other way round. Those pigeons really know how to make things dirty.
Did you know that Burj Al Arab has an employee who is a trained falconer, and he uses falcons to catch the pigeons around the building and keep it clean?
redstone
December 25th, 2004, 02:49 AM
I saw a kite hit a window, fall a few storeys down and just fly off like that before.
New Jack City
December 25th, 2004, 08:00 AM
It's funny, one guy during a public hearing on the WTC rebuilding mentioned about birds...
“Make Lower Manhattan a showcase for bird-friendly design,” he said.
To which the next speaker, Bob Friedrich, retorted: “Are we building for birds or are we building for people?”
That's exactly my thoughts, let's build for people first, then birds.
The WTC was notorious for killing birds. I once saw a documentary which said that on mornings at around 5 AM or so, before the building would really open up for work, a guy had to go and clean up dead pigeons from the plaza.
Cliff
December 25th, 2004, 10:18 AM
There are lots of birds flying around my block, they would even sit by the window sill and I could watch them up close(they can see me though the tinted glass).:D
Ah, in some parts of Singapore, the birds are so numerous that people have to walk around with umbrellas for you know why. I went to central AMK a few times and the noise from the thousands of birds among the buildings was unberable.
New Jack City
December 28th, 2004, 09:37 PM
Funny, check out the article that just came out today...
Scripps Howard News Service
Freedom Tower could be deadly for birds
By JOAN LOWY
Scripps Howard News Service
December 28, 2004
- Bird lovers are worried that one of the world's most high profile construction projects - a 1,776-foot tall office tower being erected on the site of the former World Trade Center in New York - will turn out to be a giant death trap for birds.
The Freedom Tower is expected to be the world's tallest building when it opens in 2009. Plans call for the building to be enclosed in glass, wrapped on the outside with steel cables for support, and crowned with radio towers and wind turbines to supply electricity. Computer generated images on the Web site of the building's developer, Silverstein Properties, show a graceful, brightly illuminated skyscraper.
But scientists and bird enthusiasts say more than a billion birds are killed every year in the United States by slamming into windows or circling lights atop skyscrapers until they are so dazed and confused that they crash.
"Everything that could possibly be bad for birds about a building they are doing," said Rebecca Creshkoff, 47, an avid birdwatcher and member of New York City Audubon.
The Audubon Society and New York New Visions - a coalition of 21 architecture, planning, and design organizations that came together after the 9/11 terrorist attacks that destroyed the trade center to advise on the rebuilding of lower Manhattan - have warned the project's architects and Silverstein Properties that the new building could prove especially deadly for birds.
"We've made them aware of the problem," but developers "are not under any obligation" to adjust their projects for bird safety, said Margaret Helfand, an architect and founder of New York New Visions.
Janno Lieber, Silverstein Properties' project director, said the company has hired a bird consultant to assist in designing the tower.
"In addition to our broader environmental approach, we are investigating a number of strategies for making the new buildings at the World Trade Center bird-friendly," Lieber said in a brief statement supplied in response to an inquiry.
Construction of the project began this year. The first three years of work are expected to take place below ground.
The trade center towers, among the world's tallest buildings before their destruction, were also particularly dangerous for birds, Creshkoff said. After complaints from bird lovers, the Port Authority, which managed the buildings, helped reduce the problem by turning off lights atop the towers during spring and fall migrations, she said.
"I feel an obligation to do something because if you don't work to protect what you love, what meaning is there in life?" Creshkoff said.
On the Net: www.silversteinproperties.com
www.nycaudubon.org/home/