CES at the Waterfront Campus
Building Features
Living Building Challenge
Semans-Griswold Environmental Hall was built to achieve Living Building Challenge
Certification. Living Building Challenge is a sustainable development model that is
a step above LEED certification. Not only does this certification require that we
use sustainable building materials and thoughtful decision making around the natural
environment, but it also requires that the building produces at least 105% of the energy that it will use. This will be achieved through a strand of solar
panels that will be stationed on the roof of the building, along with geothermal wells
that are installed underneath the building. Living Building Challenge also requires
a focus on the health and happiness of the building tenants, along with a focus on
art and accessibility to the community.
Three Innovative Lab Spaces
- Wet Lab and River Flow-Through System – The wet lab hosts a river flow-through system,
which pumps water from the Chester River directly into and out of the lab. This allows
our students to study different aspects of the Chester River in a controlled environment
using water directly from the river.
- Watershed Innovation Lab – The Watershed Innovation lab serves as the home to CES’s
Chester River Watershed Observatory. Here, students have the opportunity to work on
buoys that monitor the river’s water quality, side-scan sonar, build AquaBotz and
more.
- Environmental and Biology Lab – The third lab serves as a laboratory learning space for some Environmental and Biology courses at Washington College.
Waterfront Classroom Space
The classroom at SGEH is used for multiple Environmental and Biology courses, along with serving as the on-campus classroom for CES’s Chesapeake Semester.
The Center for Environment & Society's Headquarters
SGEH is the new home to the Center for Environment & Society at Washington College, one of three Signature Centers that focus on providing undergraduate students with graduate-level experiences outside of the classroom.
Feather Friendly Windows
Creating habitat includes ensuring that nearby buildings are safe for the birds that CES hopes to help. At Semans-Griswold Environmental Hall, nearby native meadows and hedgerows provide excellent habitat for birds and pollinators. We are in the process of installing Feather Friendly window treatments to help prevent bird strikes to make this living building a sanctuary for all. Feather Friendly has developed a window deterrent system that both helps birds to identify the window as an obstacle and preserve the views.MuSE: A Community Museum
Hosted by the Center for Environment and Society, this public space in downtown Chestertown exhibits collaborations between students, faculty, staff, and the wider community. MuSE hosts rotating exhibits that highlight Washington College teaching, experiential learning, and research. Each exhibit will be informational, interactive, and highly visual, creating a dynamic community space for learning and sharing on the Eastern Shore.
MuSE is currently open on First Fridays from 4:30 pm to 7:30 pm, Saturdays from 9:00
am to 12:00 pm, and by request for groups.
For more information visit this page.
Thank you for your interest in reserving space in the Semans-Griswold Environmental Hall. In order to reserve space in Semans-Griswold Environmental Hall, or with questions regarding the building, please contact Conference%20Services at 410-778-7253.
Research Vessels
Callinectes
At 46 feet long, Callinectes is fully equipped with an array of the latest electronics and environmental instrumentation including trawls, sonar, acoustic seabed classification systems, magnetometers and positioning systems used in mapping and evaluating geological features of the Bay and its tidewaters. On the Chester River, sampling gear is used to collect water and sediment samples that are analyzed to measure nutrients, dissolved oxygen, algal abundance, toxic contaminants and other factors that tell us about the ecological health of the region.
Lookdown
In April 2013 CES acquired Lookdown from NOAA with the intent to provide additional research opportunities for Washington College students. Lookdown, created for the Coast Guard, will be primarily used for mapping the river with sonar, but will also be available for special trips for water sampling and testing.
Lookdown is considerably smaller than Callinectes, which works to her advantage. She will be able to access shallower areas of the Chester and coastal areas that are inaccessible to Callinectes.
The two research vessels, the Callinectes and Lookdown, can be reserved for your classes or department usage.