Bacolod campus chapel beams as symbol of care for env’t | Inquirer News

Bacolod campus chapel beams as symbol of care for env’t

/ 06:00 AM March 23, 2012

BACOLOD CITY—What does it take to build an environmentally friendly chapel? Solar panels, LED lights, used wine bottles and a lot of heart.

Volunteers built a chapel that not only blends with its environment but has also become a model for environment friendly buildings in the country.

The chapel at the Greenheart Hermitage section of the University of Negros Occidental-Recoletos (UNO-R) campus was built with the help of three artists from Negros Occidental.

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According to Bro. Jaazeal “Tagoy” Jakosalem, the chapel is the first fully solar-powered religious structure in the country.

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“It is envisioned to have a sound spiritual and environmental atmosphere,” said Jakosalem, director of Greenheart.

The chapel was opened on Tuesday to coincide with the feast of St. Joseph, patron of the universal church.

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Jakosalem is one of three artists who offered their services for free to build what is now known here as the Earth Chapel. The two others are Marisol Alquizar, a visual artist who builds mud houses, and Nunelucio Alvarado, a social-realist.

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Alquizar designed the chapel while Jakosalem did the interiors and conceptualized the incorporation of renewable energy into the structure. Alvarado designed the crucifix for the chapel, from his pen-and-ink version of “Kristo ni Alvarado” that was transformed into a colorful mosaic as chapel centerpiece.

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The chapel is made of indigenous materials, with its structure made of mud, bamboo, rice straw and stalk, and cogon grass.

Wine bottles, which served as material for stained-glass windows, were included in the structure, Jakosalem said. LED lights provide illumination inside, he said.

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Recycled materials, such as discarded tiles and wood slabs, were also used. /inquirer.net

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