
Following is the text of a press release from RiverQuest.
RiverQuest’s Explorer is first-of-its-kind model for river
environmental education and green marine technologies
FREEPORT, FL — March 8, 2007 — Explorer, RiverQuest’s newly
constructed boat leaving Freeport, Florida today for its home port in
Pittsburgh, is a state-of-the-art environmental classroom, a world benchmark
“green” commercial vessel and a tourist attraction that is the first of its
kind.
The launch of Explorer, the world’s first green-engineered
floating classroom, marks a new era in marine design for environmental
sustainability. Departing from its construction site in Freeport, Fla., the
90-foot, 150-passenger vessel will make a 16-day journey to its permanent home
in Pittsburgh, Pa. RiverQuest provides river-based experiential learning about
sustainability including ecology, environmental science, energy, climate change,
green engineering and river history and culture for students, teachers and the
community through hands-on activities and technologies.
"Explorer
represents a truly significant paradigm shift in environmental education. It is
a tangible demonstration of our new Sustainability Education Program and it
reflects the 'leading edge' nature of our mission,” said Karl Thomas,
executive director, RiverQuest. “Together with a diverse team of marine and
green design experts from industry and academia, we have created an entirely new
approach to designing and building marine vessels by applying sustainable design
to virtually every aspect of its construction. No one else anywhere does quite
what we do; no one has a vessel quite like Explorer, which possesses
extraordinary onboard technology that supports exploration and learning.”
New Standards in Green Marine Design
Because there are no official standards for the design of “green” boats,
RiverQuest assembled a unique team of naval architects, marine and
electric-drive engineers, and green building experts from Pittsburgh, Pa.;
across Florida; Atlanta, Ga.; Houston, Texas; and Germany. The melding of global
expertise in boat design, alternative propulsions systems and the U.S. Green
Building Council’s LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) design
process and standards has resulted in a series of green applications that are
completely new to the marine industry.
“We congratulate the engineering, design and green-building teams for an
incredible achievement in building a boat that truly is the first of a kind –
setting the educational standard for rivers-based science programs and setting a
new green standard for marine vessels,” said Maxwell King, president of The
Heinz Endowments. The foundation, a steady supporter of RiverQuest since its
founding in 1991, has contributed more than $1 million toward Explorer’s
$3.5 million construction cost. Other significant funders are the Richard King
Mellon Foundation, The Buhl Foundation, the Hillman Foundation and the state
Departments of Environmental Protection and Conservation & Natural
Resources.
King said that the development of green certification for watercraft would
bring significant health benefits to Allegheny County, where more than a third
of its diesel particulate pollution comes from the 28,000 registered
recreational watercraft that run on the region’s rivers.
The design and construction team assessed some 100 different green
technologies and applied the best applicable and feasible to Explorer.
The hybrid diesel-electric, battery powered boat includes:
A state-of-the-art, Siemens-furnished hybrid propulsion system and
integrated electrical system that is the first commercial implementation in
the world.
The world’s first marine application of the LEED™ design and
construction standards that includes environmentally friendly coatings and
paints, architectural windows, HVAC systems and a hull made of 100 percent
certified steel.
The ability to retrofit the power plant with solar, hydro and fuel cell
technologies. RiverQuest will be adding a 1.5kW solar array to Explorer’s
roof later this year. Water conservation technologies including the use of
river water and waterless waste systems.
“We are proud to play a leading role in transforming the marine propulsion
industry in this period of global concern about carbon emissions and climate
change,” Reiner Pallmann, Vice President Process Solutions Division, Siemens
Energy & Automation, Inc. “The Siemens ELFA™ propulsion system
integrates multiple electrical power sources with propulsive and house power
needs, while reducing fuel consumption and emissions and providing flexibility
for current and future use of alternative sources of electricity. This
collaboration with RiverQuest was a great opportunity to bring Siemens green
technology to the commercial passenger market.”
Floating Environmental Classroom
Explorer’s impact on the marine environment will be gentle, but
its impact on America’s youth will be profound. This unique boat is designed
to educate tens of thousands of K-12 students in the Ohio Valley, from western
Pennsylvania to Missouri. All who board the vessel for hands-on learning will be
connected with global environmental issues and specific challenges and
opportunities such as water quality and quantity, climate change, responsible
land use, renewable energy and green design.
Through a unique hands-on curriculum that involves water sampling and quality
testing along rivers, public policy discussions and engagement with the boat’s
green design features, students see firsthand the results of poor land and water
use and learn the role that people and industry have in conservation and
sustainability.
And students aren’t the only ones who will depart on the environmental
voyages. RiverQuest will make the boat available to adult tourists and
businesses. Explorer’s owner, Pittsburgh-based non-profit RiverQuest,
has added a new line of adult education programs and charters to its business,
which incorporates best practices from the social innovation sector, an industry
trend that is growing increasingly important for nonprofits worldwide.
In the future, RiverQuest intends to install additional alternative energy
sources, including solar panels later this year and wind and water turbines to
the boat and to its expanded dock and landside facility.
RiverQuest, formerly Pittsburgh Voyager, is an award-winning not-for-profit
education organization offering river-based educational programs for students,
teachers, and the community. RiverQuest also provides a range of public
programs, including interpretive cruises and private charters for businesses,
organizations and the public.
RiverQuest's mission is to impact people’s relationships to the world’s
environment through unique river-based education and adventure experiences.
Since launching programs in 1995, RiverQuest has served more than 75,000
individuals through on-board education programming. More than 57,000 elementary,
middle and high school students representing 227 schools from 65 school
districts in 11 western Pennsylvania counties have participated in
standards-based learning programs, with themes ranging from environmental
science and regional history to physical science and mathematics. Along with
students, more than 2,500 teachers and college students and 15,000 members of
the general public have participated in RiverQuest programs.
Launched on May 18, 2006. . .




The Explorer
is an
89x26' classroom boat constructed at Freeport
Shipbuilding. for RiverQuest
(formerly Pittsburgh Voyager).
Construction photos courtesy of John
Bond.
August 11, 2006

November 14, 2005

October 2, 2005

September
20, 2005