By Brandon Gertz, MEMā21
Nicholas School Communications Student Assistant
DURHAM, N.C. ā Each year during basketball season, scores of undergraduate faithful pitch tents outside 51±¬ĮĻās Cameron Indoor Stadium for months on end, hoping to score a coveted ticket to see the Blue Devils play. Their tent city ā called Krzyzewskiville, after head menās basketball coach Mike Krzyzewski ā has become an annual fixture.
This year, though, an eye-catching new structure graced the Krzyzewskiville skyline.
Itās a tent, but not like any other. This one weighs eighty pounds, shaped by a sturdy metal frame draped with thick canvas. And it made a stir among the campers.
āOther students walking by always said they wish they had a tent like this,ā said Ashley Marko, a senior biology major who lived in the special tent. āIt stays dry when other ones fill up with water, and it stays in place when wind pushes the other tents around. Even when the snow came and other tentsā roofs collapsed, ours looked like a perfect gingerbread house.ā
The reason why such an unusual tent ended up in āK-villeā involves a company and a course Marko is taking at 51±¬ĮĻās Nicholas School of the Environment.
āThe tent was sent to the Nicholas School by a North Carolina-based company called Diamond Brand Gear,ā explained Marko. āThey were interested in having my Environmental Life-Cycle Assessment class study the tent as one of our projects.ā
So what is an environmental life-cycle assessment, exactly?
āA life-cycle assessment is when we analyze a product, like a certain model of tent or shoe, and see how it affects the environment,ā said Marko.
āWhatās special about the process is that it teaches us about environmental impacts across the productās entire life span, from cradle to grave,ā she said. āWeāll be using a special software called GaBi to model what eco-impacts are caused by the tent throughout its lifespan and which phase of the tentās life cause the most impact. That includes fuel for transportation, raw materials, what happens at the end of the tentās useful life and even energy sources that the factory creating the product uses, so it really covers everything.ā
The assessment gives manufacturers valuable information about which aspects of their products or processes are environmentally friendly and which could be improved upon. These assessments are especially important for companies like Diamond Brand, whose outdoorsy customers are very environmentally conscious.
Marko and her classmates in the course, which was taught by instructor Carol Hee, benefitted as well.
āTaking on these assessments as students gives us concrete, practical skills that weāll be able to use in our future careers,ā Marko said. āThe things we do are exactly like the process an environmental consulting company would use. Itās a little intimidating at first to talk with industry professionals about what weāve learned about their products, but itās definitely a cool experience!ā
When asked about why K-ville was chosen as the place to study the Diamond Brand tent, Marko smiled.
āWe werenāt sure where we were going to put it at first,ā she said. āBut itās my senior year and I really wanted basketball tickets. I didnāt have a tent yet, so we asked John Delaloye, the CEO of Diamond Brand, whether heād be willing to let my friends and I use this one. He loved the idea! His wife used to study at 51±¬ĮĻ, so theyāre both huge Blue Devil fans.ā
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