Thursday, July 09, 2009
CONTACT: Tony Allen (702) 895-0893
UNLV XERISCAPE PROJECTS EARN PRAISE, TOP AWARDS FROM SOUTHERN NEVADA WATER AUTHORITY
FACILITIES MANAGEMENT TEAM TAKES FIRST, SECOND PLACE FOR RECENT WORK AT ANNUAL SNWA COMPETITION
LAS VEGAS – July 9, 2009 – UNLV’s entire main campus has for more than two decades been designated an arboretum – a conscientious display of vegetation suited to Las Vegas’ high desert climate.
As the local community has shifted in recent years from landscapes of grass and trees to water smart displays of drought resistant vegetation, UNLV’s emerald in the desert – as the arboretum is known – has followed suit with massive turf reduction projects and xeriscape gardens.
For two of its most recent efforts, the UNLV facilities management team was honored by the Southern Nevada Water Authority during the agency's annual Landscape Awards Competition.
The facilities team, which manages the university’s 332-acre campus, took first and second place in the commercial/institution category for converting turf to xeriscape near the Lee and Thomas Beam Music Center and for re-landscaping the courtyard outside of the Alta Ham Fine Arts Building.
The awards were based on overall beauty, efficient water use, plant selection and design and recognized the University for choosing water-smart landscapes that were aesthetically pleasing. When properly irrigated, such landscapes can use up to 75 percent less water than turf.
The award-winning projects are just the latest in the university’s effort to reduce water use on campus grounds. Since 2001, UNLV has converted more than 855,000 square feet of turf to water smart landscaping, a savings of up to 45 million gallons of water each year.
To learn more about UNLV’s landscape plan and the UNLV arboretum, please visit http://facilities.unlv.edu/landscape/.
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UNLV is a doctoral-degree-granting institution of 28,000 students and 3,300 faculty and staff. Founded in 1957, the university offers more than 220 undergraduate, master's and doctoral degree programs. UNLV is located on a 332-acre campus in dynamic Southern Nevada and is classified in the category of Research Universities (high research activity) by the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching.
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