University of the Arts Residence Hall Construction Woodland Ave

(MANJU SHIVACHARAN / THE STATESMAN)
Several hundred trees were cleared for the construction of a 759-bed residence hall and sixty,000 square-pes dining facility on Toll Drive. Three out of four "exploitably vulnerable" trees were replanted in the Research & Development Park. (MANJU SHIVACHARAN / THE STATESMAN)

The construction of the new residence hall on Price Drive resulted in the loss of many copse, but Stony Brook plans to work toward rehabilitation of the environment.

At the Nov. 13 Undergraduate Student Authorities senate meeting, Higher of Arts and Sciences Sen. Taylor Bouraad gave an estimate that 5,000 copse were destroyed from construction, but Stony Brook Academy Media Relations found that although the trees have not been counted, at least several hundred were removed.

Alida Almonte, the managing director of University Media Relations, sent an email to The Statesman with information from Barbara Chernow, the senior vice president for administration.

"[A]lmost all structure projects on campus take involved cut trees," Almonte wrote in the email.

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Around v.5 acres of woodlands were cleared for the construction of the new residence hall. The Land Environmental Quality Review reported that the Toll Drive residence hall site independent around iii.2 acres of woodlands, and the parking expansion consisted of about 2.2 acres.

The loss of trees was a necessary pace, co-ordinate to the university, in the structure of the 759-bed residence hall and 60,000 square-human foot dining facility.

AKRF, an ecology planning and engineering consulting firm, conducted a survey of the construction area. "They identified four 'exploitably vulnerable' plant species," Almonte wrote.

One of the four trees, the flowering dogwood, was not re-planted because of its
poor condition.

There were fewer than 10 dogwoods on the site. "One short one was selected as having the all-time chance of survival, but when the fourth dimension came for transplanting fifty-fifty that ane did not announced fit enough for transplant," Almonte wrote.

The remaining three of the four "exploitably vulnerable" trees were replanted in the Research & Evolution Park, where Campus Operations and Maintenance has a greenhouse to cultivate the plants and landscaping used around campus.

"At the conclusion of the residence hall project new copse will be planted along the sidewalks of the parcel, but they volition be not be a recreation of a 'woodland,'" Almonte wrote.

Since 2006, Stony Brook has been working to increase tree inventory. In that year lone, the academy planted 248 trees. From 2006 to May 2014, Stony Beck had successfully planted over 1,223 trees, 675 saplings, 2,286 bushes, 741 perennials and 383 varieties of all four categories, according to a May 2014 press release from the university

Earlier this year, Stony Brook was designated a "Tree Campus USA" University by the Arbor Day Foundation for SBU's piece of work toward environmental sustainability and forestry management.

Stony Brook obtained this designation through the completion of 5 core standards, which include a Campus Tree Advisory Committee, a Campus Tree Intendance Plan, a Campus Tree Programme with Dedicated Almanac Expenditures, Arbor Solar day Observance and a Service Learning Projection.

According to the Arbor Day Foundation, "Tree Campus USA" universities take planted 110,785 copse in the past 5 years.

Stony Brook restores trees lost through construction as well equally destruction from other circumstances. Afterward Hurricane Irene hit Long Isle, SBU replaced 24 trees lost in the storm.

SBU's environmental consciousness began in 1967 with the founding of the Environmental Defense force Fund. Stony Beck has since get a partner at the American Higher & University Presidents' Climate Commitment.

Stony Brook's delivery to the environment has been rewarded with many accolades including the highest score possible in Princeton Review's 2015 Light-green Honor Curl.

The original 450 acres of West Campus were donated to the State of New York by Ward Melville, an agile philanthropist particularly around the "Iii Village" area. Originally 80 pct of the property was wooded with the exception of a few fields by the railroad line and N P Lot. Many woodland areas have been removed in order to make way for new structures.

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Source: https://www.sbstatesman.com/2014/12/13/construction-on-toll-drive-results-in-destruction-of-5-5-acres-of-woodland/

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