Green Collaboratory Midtown's Green Garage houses businesses with a social mission. Harry Kirsbaum I Contributing Writer T hink of it as one of Detroit's little ironies: an ecologically sound, environmentally sustainable hub for start- up businesses housed in a former Model T Ford show- room. The Green Garage, located on Second Avenue in Midtown Detroit, is trying to pave a new way of developing socially conscious business in a building that once helped give birth to the automo- tive revolution. Tom and Peggy Brennan, the build- ing's owners, have been interested in the environment since Tom sat on the board of the Monroe-based River Raisin Project, a Catholic nonprofit organization dedicated to ecology and sustainability, said Peggy dur- ing a tour of the 12,500-square-foot building. "We sat down with about a dozen friends in 2005 and formed the Great Lakes Initiative, and that group met at our kitchen table every Tuesday morning from 10 a.m. to noon for five years and talked about different areas of environmental sustainability," she said. 'As an outgrowth of that project, we thought it would be interesting to develop a sort of green demonstration center for the things we had learned and locate it close to a university" 38 May 2012 I IUD TIMM When they bought the building in 2007, 200 volunteers helped with the design, followed by two more years of construction. It opened in late October 2011. The Brennans funded the $1.5 million project, but also received brownfield tax credits from the state. They spent as much to renovate the structure as it would have cost to raze the old building and build a new one, she said. Most of the costs were for labor. The Green Garage is considered a net-zero building: It produces as much energy as it consumes. The outside windows are very efficient. Solar tubes coming into the building help light the inside and reduce the need to heat and cool the building by 85 percent. Solar thermal panels on the roof heat water in tanks, and the water runs underneath the floors to heat the building. Brennan estimates it will cost only $300 a year to heat the building. The interior is as beautiful as it is "green," with the main stairway made out of old steam and gas pipes, a wall constructed from scrap wood, and the railing an old walkway that connected the two mezzanines. About 75 per- cent of the materials brought into the building came from the U. S. waste stream. The floor came from fallen oak and ash trees. The frames for the interior windows were donated from a powerhouse in Lansing, and all the furniture came from a Detroit Public School warehouse. 'We filled one-and-a-half dump- sters for this two-year project," she said. "Everything else stayed in this building." There are currently 15 businesses hanging a shingle in the Green Ga- rage, with room for another 15. Shared table space rents for $50 a month, a desk for $125 a month, or rent a space for four-five people for $1,000 a month. Private meeting rooms are available and people can work at the Imagina- rium, a lounge upstairs with couches. The businesses that operate out of the Green Garage are socially con- scious and include photographers, website developers and healthy food providers. The following three busi- nesses have Jewish influences. Students Get Fit Matthew Tugender, chief market- ing officer and director of sales of Students Get Fit, says the advertis- ing company "gives you the incentive to get up off your ass and get in the SGF provides incentives to college students on college campuses to get fit, said Tugender, 25, of Walled Lake. He calls it "moral advertising." Once the students sign up, their fitness is tracked through one-time login geo-tracking. "They walk in to an approved fit- ness center that is basically the school gym and work out at least 30 minutes to get credit for the workout. "There are short- and long-term incen- Matthew tives for students, Tugender from daily prizes to weekly prizes to grand prizes," he said. "Short-term you can win a $10 gift card for a salad, but long term, if you hit your fitness plateau, which is 50 days of working out per semester, you're not only going to start looking better and eating better, but you'll be eligible to win the bigger prizes, which will be the iPads, the televi- sions, the things you want really bad. 'We try to educate you on food choices, on how to work out and make it habit forming," he said. 'We just had a challenge that ended at University of Detroit Mercy (UDM) last week. We gave away an iPad as a www.redthreadmagazine.com