BEREA, Ky. â Berea College is one of the nation’s most environmentally responsible colleges, according to The Princeton Review, the education services company that just published the 2019 edition of its Guide to Green Colleges.
Known as a leader in turning the Bluegrass state âgreen,â Berea College, is one of 413 schools profiled in the new guide, which can be accessed at www.princetonreview.com/green-guide.
The guide is based on a survey the company conducted in 2018â19 of administrators at hundreds of four-year colleges about their institutionsâ commitments to the environment and sustainability. The guide states, âBerea College is a model for sustainability in higher education for the Appalachian region and beyond.â
Berea College is home to the worldâs first Living Building-certified student residence hall, which is the only building in Kentucky that meets the rigorous Living Building Challenge green standards. Bereaâs Deep Green residence hall earned Living Building Challenge Petal Certification, meeting all imperatives in four of the petals the College hoped to achieve. Berea College also has Kentuckyâs first LEED-certified building (Lincoln Hall), first gold LEED-certified hotel (Boone Tavern) and first Ecovillage. College operations also meet high âgreenâ standards with certified organic produce and meat from Bereaâs Farm served in Dining Services and Boone Tavern, and sold to the public at the Berea College Farm Store. The College composts food wastes, uses solar energy in several buildings, operates campus-wide recycling and participates in other sustainable practices.
âSustainable living has been embraced by students, faculty and staff throughout Bereaâs history,â said Joan Pauly, sustainability coordinator at Berea College. âIt is part of our very DNA. When you consider the environmental, social and economic impact of every decision, you can achieve great things. Berea College is honored to be recognized once again this year for our achievements in The Princeton Reviewâs for Guide Green Colleges.â
âWe saluteâand strongly recommendâBerea College to the many environmentally-minded students who want to study and live at a green college,â said Rob Franek, The Princeton Review‘s editor-in-chief.
Franek noted that college applicants and their parents are increasingly concerned about the environment and sustainability issues. Among the 11,900 teens and parents The Princeton Review surveyed earlier this year, 64% said having information about a collegeâs commitment to the environment would influence their decision to apply to or attend the school.
The profiles in The Princeton Review’s Guide to Green Colleges, which began publishing its annual green guide of colleges in 2010, provide information about admission requirements, cost and financial aid, and student body demographics. They also include âGreen Facts” about the schools, with details on such matters as the availability of transportation alternatives at the schools and the percentage of the schoolsâ food budgets spent on local/organic food.
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