Cal Academy builds on its message of sustainability

ByABC News
October 16, 2008, 8:28 PM

SAN FRANCISCO -- By definition, museums are big boxes that store stuff. But in the case of the new California Academy of Sciences, what a wild box it is.

In fact, the place could be stripped of its last ancient bone and it would still warrant a visit.

Designed by noted Italian architect Renzo Piano, the resurrected, $500 million Cal Academy as locals call it is an eco-friendly edifice whose pointed mission is to educate the masses about global warming. From an array of solar panels to its self-ventilating portholes to a living roof sprouting native grasses, it preaches sustainability.

"We had this wonderful opportunity to rebuild it with an eye on the issue of the day, which is how we got here and how we're going to stay here," says Christopher Andrews, the museum's head of public programs.

That lesson is never more pointed than in a wing dedicated to both explaining the human-influenced causes of global warming and suggesting ways to fight the trend, whether through reducing carbon footprints or consuming locally grown foods. If the or-else message wasn't clear enough, the dominant display in the area is the skeleton of the ultimate and extinct predator, Tyrannosaurus rex.

"Given the dire state of the planet, this museum's bold approach thrills me," says Alan Leshner, CEO of the non-profit American Association for the Advancement of Science. " A science museum ought to be living what it preaches, and this one does."

The Cal Academy's green bona fides merited a top-level platinum rating from the Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design, or LEED. While Andrews was initially nervous about reaction to the "non-linear flow" of the exhibits there are few walls or passageways to suggest a route two weeks after the opening, he is reassured.

"The world is used to bouncing around the Web looking for information," he says. "Why not have a museum that allows you to do the same thing?"

Founded in 1853, the old Cal Academy mushroomed into 11 buildings on this same site in Golden Gate Park. Before shuttering in 2002, the museum encompassed an aquarium, planetarium and earth sciences center, which now anchor the new facility.