Berkeley Lab Breaks Ground on Flexible Design Building to Test Low-energy Systems and Components

Today marks the start of a new era for research on energy-efficient buildings at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.

Written byLawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
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Berkeley, Calif., Dec. 7, 2012—Today marks the start of a new era for research on energy-efficient buildings at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab). Lab leadership and distinguished guests from the U.S. Department of Energy, the state of California, utilities and the building industry broke ground on the start of construction for the Facility for Low-Energy eXperiments on Buildings (FLEXLAB).

“Our new FLEXLAB facility will open the doors to many new ideas on how we can reduce energy consumed by buildings. Today, buildings are responsible for about 40 percent of our nation’s greenhouse gas emissions,” says Ashok Gadgil, director of Berkeley Lab’s Environmental Energy Technologies Division (EETD). “Finding new, advanced, building technologies should help us save up to 80 percent on new construction.”

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