Tammy Eagle Bull, FAIA, AICAE, NCARB, is an architect and President of the firm Encompass Architects based in Lincoln, Nebraska, which she co-founded in 2002. She is a member of the Oglala Lakota Nation of Pine Ridge, South Dakota, and a graduate of Arizona State University and the University of.
Tammy Eagle Bull, FAIA, AICAE, NCARB. Photo courtesy of Encompass Architects
Tammy Eagle Bull, FAIA, AICAE, NCARB, is an architect and President of the firm Encompass Architects based in Lincoln, Nebraska, which she co-founded in 2002. She is a member of the Oglala Lakota Nation of Pine Ridge, South Dakota, and a graduate of Arizona State University and the University of Minnesota. This discussion occurred between March and May of 2021 and explored the changes that have occurred in the past 40 years where Ms. Eagle Bull has been involved in the architecture industry, since the time she first began studying architecture through the challenges of this past year.
The places paving the way to 100 percent renewable energy
Burlington, Vermont has been running on renewable electricity since 2014
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Shortly before Darren Springer
interviewed for a job at the Burlington Electric Department (BED) in 2016, the city proudly proclaimed that it would become a “net zero energy city” by 2030. That meant no more gas or oil to heat residents’ homes and swapping out gas-powered cars for electric vehicles and more public transportation.
“That’s got to be one of the most ambitious goals anywhere”
“I said, that’s got to be one of the most ambitious goals anywhere in the country,” Springer, who is now BED’s general manager, tells