Auburn Universitys campus is foremost a place of learning, but it is also a thriving community of 1,785 acres an area that takes a number of hands and offices to make the Loveliest Village on the Plains live up to its nickname.
Justin Sutton, director of landscape services, said there are about 50 landscapers at Auburn. For daily maintenance, they have six zones, each with a supervisor and five to six employees.
Those are mostly the people you see out and about every day, Sutton said. They maintain their area of responsibility, and that goes everything from mowing grass to trimming shrubs to applying fertilizers.
Sutton said along with maintenance, landscaping has projects they plan and execute. They also assist with capital projects that are installed by a contractor and once the projects are complete, they keep up the maintenance.
He said the cost of maintenance and materials average around $340,000 a year for landscape services. About half of that cost is for the materials used for projects.
Within that number, pine straw and mulch average about $78,000, fertilizer and pesticides $53,000 and soil $3,600 respectively.
This [soil] number is low due to a lot of our soil and amendment coming from our compost yard, and the soil that is milled off of Jordan-Hare Stadium, he said.
Sutton said most of the plants on campus are drought-tolerant. However, their annual colors, like the flowers, rotate frequently, he said.
We grow most of what we put on campus here at our facilities site and our greenhouse, he said.
Sutton said he gives credit to the staff who earn each landscaping award the University receives.
We got a lot of guys who are just dedicated to their job and are proud of what they do, Sutton said. They just keep campus going great no matter what time of year it is.
Morgan Beadles, the director of the Donald E. Davis Arboretum, said the arboretum helps with conservation.
Beadles said the upkeep takes a lot of specialized maintenance and hands-on work with pruning shrubs and fertilizing.
We have a collection to protect, so we cant have big machinery out here, she said. We cant have big, heavy equipment moving around because you have to protect the roots in the collection.
Beadles said the workload is always heavy, but the type of work changes with the seasons.
Theres a balance between it feeling natural and manicured and not overly manicured, but still safe, Beadles said.
Between student employees, repairs and materials, Beadles said they spend about $40,000 a year on maintenance.
She said they get a semi-truck load of pine straw, and this year, they got about 1,568 bales of pine straw.
Through this effort, Beadles said they have won the AU Spirit of Sustainability Award, the Eagle Award from the Auburn Chamber of Commerce and have been the American Public Garden Associations featured garden of the week twice.
Maintaining scenery isnt only about keeping campus visually appealing, but also about providing a learning space for certain majors to gain practical experience.
Some schools make use of Parkerson Mill Creek as a teaching tool for students, but because it runs through campus, it also requires annual cleanup.
All the trash thats on the streets that goes into the gutters ultimately ends up into the creek, and so we try to promote initiatives that keep the campus clean, said Tom McCauley, environmental program manager of Risk Management Services. We try to bring awareness to the fact that the creek is a resource. Its an attribute to campus, and we should try to preserve that as best we can.
Unlike other environmental affairs, the yearly creek cleanup is entirely a student and faculty effort. McCauley said its not financial funding but an investment of time and energy from the Auburn Family that allows the program to exist.
All of our efforts are volunteer efforts, McCauley said. We try to involve faculty and students as best as we can, [and] we try to partner with the City because we have a mutual interest.
Not only has the cleanup benefited major programs like hydrology, aquatic behaviors and ecosystems and engineering, it has additionally helped the University receive a designation for its sustainable water system.
The University was designated as a watershed of excellence, which means weve got the means to promote watershed conservation, McCauley said. Theres no better way to show it by example than creating a watershed here on campus thats a preserved specimen.
McCauley said cleanups usually occur in cooler months during late winter and early spring when volunteers might be more amenable to collect trash.
Several times a year well try to gather some momentum, get some involvement through some campus organizations, McCauley said.
Its latest events were on Feb. 23, in a partnership with Omega Phi Alpha, and on March 1, in association with Alternative Student Breaks. It has one other cleanup planned for the semester on April 4, with the Office of Sustainability in advance of Earth Week.
Waste Reduction and Recycling is the department that sees the rest of campus land and litter maintained each year. This is a significant responsibility for an institution of 30,000 students, and the office receives strong financial backing by the University to uphold its mission: to strive to make recycling accessible and convenient, said Joan Hicken, WRRs manager.
[Our] yearly budget is about $500,000, and the solid waste and recycling collection contract is about $600,000 annually, Hicken said. We want to encourage students, staff, faculty and visitors to incorporate recycling into their daily routine on campus.
A sizable portion of this funding goes into upkeep for WRRs containers and machinery. These include over 400 hand-pick trash bins, 130 front-end loaders for solid waste and 200 95-gallon recycling bins, among other utilities.
Altogether in 2019, the University recycled 371 tons of cardboard, 219 tons of paper, 50 tons of scrap metal, 41 tons of plastic, aluminum and steel and 3.5 tons of printer ink cartridges and toner.
Most notably, WRR collected 2,041 tons of construction and demolition debris from on-campus projects in the past year that included sidewalks and sheds that were destroyed. The removal of Allison Laboratory, while not factored into this count, also brought the department a lot of recycled and reclaimed material.
3,161 tons of concrete, 196 tons of asphalt, 129 tons of metal and 85 tons of wood were removed and recycled, Hicken said. In addition, 45,265 linear feet of lumber was reclaimed for future design use by the University.
All concrete, metal and wood that made up Allison Laboratory was fully recycled by the department, she said.
Football season is perhaps WRRs most important time of year; a plethora of people visiting campus for games means a wave of waste follows and is a high cost for the department.
They started the Gameday Recycling program to bring hundreds of recycling bins in and around Jordan-Hare Stadium to ensure fans put their trash in the proper receptacles.
Gameday Recycling is an opportunity for the University to demonstrate to the campus community that recycling and waste reduction activities are not limited to the home, Hicken said. To provide waste and recycling services for each home football game is on average $15,000 per game. Each home football game generates, on average, 52 tons of waste and recycling.
Hicken said WRR performs its functions in tandem with other offices such as Housing and Residence Life, Tiger Dining, Risk Management Services and Auburn Athletics to achieve the Universitys land-grant mission of improving the lives of Alabamians and people beyond.
The entire campus community plays a role in our progress to becoming a more sustainable campus, Hicken said. There is not an aspect of campus life that is not touched by waste and recycling.
Keeping campus beautiful isnt just a job for a single group. At Auburn, it takes a team of departments and organizations to maintain the campus landscape and promote a loveliness the University seeks to preserve.
Read the original here:
What it takes to maintain the Loveliest Village on the Plains - The Auburn Plainsman
- Homeowner met with warnings after sharing landscaping dilemma: 'You'll regret it for years to come' - The Cool Down - January 3rd, 2025 [January 3rd, 2025]
- Can You Get Rid of Your Front Lawn Without Offending the Neighbors? - The New York Times - September 29th, 2024 [September 29th, 2024]
- These Evergreen Shrubs Add Year-Round Beauty to Your Yard - Country Living - September 29th, 2024 [September 29th, 2024]
- The Ultimate Guide to Seasonal Landscape Maintenance - Better Homes & Gardens - February 26th, 2024 [February 26th, 2024]
- How to Plant a Clover Lawn, According to Landscape Experts - House Beautiful - February 26th, 2024 [February 26th, 2024]
- 9 Succulent Garden Ideas That Will Add Sculptural Dimension to Your Landscape - Martha Stewart - February 26th, 2024 [February 26th, 2024]
- 11 Front Yard Landscaping Ideas to Boost Your Home's Curb Appeal - Better Homes & Gardens - February 26th, 2024 [February 26th, 2024]
- 23 Curb Appeal Ideas for the Best Front Yard on the Block - Better Homes & Gardens - February 26th, 2024 [February 26th, 2024]
- Why xeriscapes might be the next generation of home landscapes in California - ABC10.com KXTV - August 20th, 2022 [August 20th, 2022]
- Opinion: Nonprofit shows we can take the time to help the climate - Iowa City Press-Citizen - August 20th, 2022 [August 20th, 2022]
- TIMOTHY DALY: Making your garden attractive to wildlife - Henry Herald - August 20th, 2022 [August 20th, 2022]
- How the 1992 SEC championship game altered the college football landscape forever - ESPN - August 20th, 2022 [August 20th, 2022]
- YARD AND GARDEN: A garden for every child, a child in every garden - Journal Gazette / Times-Courier - August 20th, 2022 [August 20th, 2022]
- Rocks: a great alternative to grass - Austin Weekly News - August 20th, 2022 [August 20th, 2022]
- Tom Clyde: Adventures in the real world - The Park Record - August 20th, 2022 [August 20th, 2022]
- What is Hardscaping and Should Real Estate Investors Do It? - MSN Money - February 9th, 2021 [February 9th, 2021]
- UC ANR Reports Drought-Tolerant Plants Can Save Water, But Beware Of Those That Are Toxic - Sierra Sun Times - February 9th, 2021 [February 9th, 2021]
- Doreen Fogle: Grow some flowers to create a meadow for wildlife - The Union of Grass Valley - February 9th, 2021 [February 9th, 2021]
- Robotic Lawn Mower Market Outlook By Product, Application, End-User and Forecast The Courier - The Courier - February 9th, 2021 [February 9th, 2021]
- Film Study: Ohio State's Destruction at the Hands of Alabama RPOs Was Years in the Making | Eleven Warriors - Eleven Warriors - February 9th, 2021 [February 9th, 2021]
- Replanting the landscape: Turn the derecho disaster into opportunity - The Gazette - October 24th, 2020 [October 24th, 2020]
- Army will play Pac-12 team in Independence Bowl - Times Herald-Record - October 24th, 2020 [October 24th, 2020]
- 6 Gardening Tasks You MUST Complete this Month - Signals AZ - October 24th, 2020 [October 24th, 2020]
- Jones, for now, on the wrong side of memorable moments - Newsday - October 24th, 2020 [October 24th, 2020]
- Rapid Reaction: TJ Finley and friends lead LSU to dominant win over South Carolina - Saturday Down South - October 24th, 2020 [October 24th, 2020]
- Lake of the Pines residents recall near-miss with CalWood Fire - The Daily Camera - October 24th, 2020 [October 24th, 2020]
- See How D.C.s Iconic Tidal Basin Is Being Reimagined by Five Design Teams - Architectural Digest - October 24th, 2020 [October 24th, 2020]
- Melrose Heights hosts "Art in the Yard" events during pandemic - Columbia Star - October 24th, 2020 [October 24th, 2020]
- What we learned in Ohio States 52-17 beatdown of Nebraska - Land-Grant Holy Land - October 24th, 2020 [October 24th, 2020]
- Let's Grow: Beat back the Japanese Honeysuckle invasion - Chillicothe Gazette - October 24th, 2020 [October 24th, 2020]
- Illinois seeking to surprise No. 14 Wisconsin one more time - Greater Milwaukee Today - October 24th, 2020 [October 24th, 2020]
- Cemetery cleanup to start Nov. 9 | Briefs | themountaineer.com - The Mountaineer - October 24th, 2020 [October 24th, 2020]
- Forde-Yard Dash: Think Twice Before Handing Out That Contract Extension - Sports Illustrated - October 20th, 2020 [October 20th, 2020]
- Dock and Yard Management System Market Trends, Size, Share, Status, Analysis and Forecast to 2027 With Leading Players 4Front Engineered Solutions, C3... - October 20th, 2020 [October 20th, 2020]
- Evan Petty, One of Top Remaining Recruits in Class of 2021, Commits to Cal - SwimSwam - October 20th, 2020 [October 20th, 2020]
- Native Trees, Like Oaks and Yaupons, are Good for Our Environment and Our Health - Living Architecture Monitor magazine - October 20th, 2020 [October 20th, 2020]
- Dubai-based landscape architect Will Bennett launches WILDEN... - Construction Business News - October 20th, 2020 [October 20th, 2020]
- Thanks to a design coalition with community ties, Philadelphia's Graffiti Pier will live on as a public park - The Architect's Newspaper - October 20th, 2020 [October 20th, 2020]
- Tips for taking care of your lawn in the fall in West Texas - Standard-Times - October 20th, 2020 [October 20th, 2020]
- Pain in the grass: Protecting cold-sensitive plants - Las Cruces Sun-News - October 20th, 2020 [October 20th, 2020]
- SI's Top 10: It's Clemson, Alabama and the Rest - Sports Illustrated - October 20th, 2020 [October 20th, 2020]
- Fall foliage at home, struggling evergreens, and composting: This Weekend in the Garden - pennlive.com - October 20th, 2020 [October 20th, 2020]
- Culture The Renovation of Tianbao Cave District of Erlang Town / Jiakun Architects - ArchDaily - October 20th, 2020 [October 20th, 2020]
- Without a Right to Garden Law, It May Be Illegal to Grow Your Own Food - Civil Eats - October 20th, 2020 [October 20th, 2020]
- Petitioners urge Greenville County to act against sprawl in rural northern areas - Greenville News - October 20th, 2020 [October 20th, 2020]
- Poll: Who was Staten Islands best HS football player of the last decade? - SILive.com - September 20th, 2020 [September 20th, 2020]
- Your lawn may be hungry and thirsty now - West Hawaii Today - September 20th, 2020 [September 20th, 2020]
- Webs in the Trees? They're Relatively Harmless - - Adirondack Almanack - September 20th, 2020 [September 20th, 2020]
- Texans & AFC South: Who Are The Impact Newcomers? - State of The Texans - September 20th, 2020 [September 20th, 2020]
- Big Ten's decision changes landscape of the 2020 college football season - Yardbarker - September 20th, 2020 [September 20th, 2020]
- Patriots vs. Seahawks: Where Malcolm Butler and the rest the Super Bowl XLIX stars are six years later - CBS Sports - September 20th, 2020 [September 20th, 2020]
- Green Your Yard The Green Way | Columns - CapeNews.net - September 20th, 2020 [September 20th, 2020]
- Guest View: Stopping the fires on our doorsteps - The Register-Guard - September 20th, 2020 [September 20th, 2020]
- Oklahoma State will take any COVID-era victory, but the Cowboys didnt look like a threat to the Sooners on - The Dallas Morning News - September 20th, 2020 [September 20th, 2020]
- Boston College caps long, unusual journey with impressive road win over Duke - The Boston Globe - September 20th, 2020 [September 20th, 2020]
- The Latest: Noren shoots 67 early in 3rd round at US Open - Your Valley - September 20th, 2020 [September 20th, 2020]
- Frank Gore Just Revealed How He Wants to His NFL Career to End - Sportscasting - September 20th, 2020 [September 20th, 2020]
- September is the start of spring bulb planting season - Iowa City Press-Citizen - September 20th, 2020 [September 20th, 2020]
- Brady to Shady: LeSean McCoy Is Officially in the Ring Chasing Part of His Career - Sportscasting - September 20th, 2020 [September 20th, 2020]
- CAROL LINK ON GARDENING: Tropical hibiscus varieties are winter houseplants in this area - Gadsden Times - August 28th, 2020 [August 28th, 2020]
- Landscaping with Daylilies - The Tryon Daily Bulletin - Tryon Daily Bulletin - August 28th, 2020 [August 28th, 2020]
- Conservation Corner: Plants that stain the landscape, deck, and car - Lancaster Eagle Gazette - August 28th, 2020 [August 28th, 2020]
- Heat and Dry Weather Pose Problems For Landscape Plants - The Roanoke Star - August 28th, 2020 [August 28th, 2020]
- ALL ABOARD: Jenison man transforms backyard into train trip around the world - WZZM13.com - August 28th, 2020 [August 28th, 2020]
- Will Peterson finish with more rushing yards than Gore? - NBC Sports Washington - August 28th, 2020 [August 28th, 2020]
- Tidbits and Rumblings around the College Football Landscape - 247Sports - August 28th, 2020 [August 28th, 2020]
- Victory gardens then and now - Delaware Gazette - August 28th, 2020 [August 28th, 2020]
- 'He could do it all': York County volleyball icon remembered for selflessness on and off the court - York Daily Record - August 28th, 2020 [August 28th, 2020]
- Fall Is Ideal Time For Planting Most Trees And Native Plants - WUWM - August 28th, 2020 [August 28th, 2020]
- House of the Day: Beautiful Lake Eola Heights home with mother-in-law suite asking $1025000 - Bungalower - August 28th, 2020 [August 28th, 2020]
- 4 Options for an Ideal Outdoor Space: Pick the One That's Right for You Pasadena Weekendr - Pasadena Now - August 28th, 2020 [August 28th, 2020]
- Steps That Harvard Graduate School of Design is Taking to Adapt to Online-Only Courses - Core77.com - August 28th, 2020 [August 28th, 2020]
- 46 new flats approved in Twickenham's Station Yard - Richmond and Twickenham Times - August 28th, 2020 [August 28th, 2020]
- Hayden Hurst is the next Mark Andrews in fantasy football | PFN - Pro Football Network - August 28th, 2020 [August 28th, 2020]
- Dredging Excavator Market Analysis by Emerging Growth Factors and Revenue Forecast to 2026 | American Marine & Machinery Co. Inc., China... - August 28th, 2020 [August 28th, 2020]
- Thom Smith | NatureWatch: Invasive plants are something to be reckoned with - Berkshire Eagle - August 28th, 2020 [August 28th, 2020]
- Waterford garden a haven for wildlife and humans - theday.com - August 28th, 2020 [August 28th, 2020]
- Ranking the offensive play-callers from every NFL team - Yardbarker - August 28th, 2020 [August 28th, 2020]
- 150 miles across Albuquerque in the time of Corona - Weekly Alibi - August 28th, 2020 [August 28th, 2020]
- Heres how to create a lush landscape without excessive water usage - KTAR.com - August 16th, 2020 [August 16th, 2020]