After 25 years on the river, Robin Dunbar is now walking on Grounds.
Dunbar joined the University of Virginia’s Environmental Institute this summer as a fellow, transitioning from her career as deputy director of education for the Elizabeth River Project, the organization tasked with cleaning up one of the most polluted rivers along the Chesapeake Bay.
During her tenure, she teamed with UVA architecture professor Phoebe Crisman, whom she met at an environmental conference, and together they developed an idea that became the Learning Barge, a floating classroom to educate students about sustainability.
Led by Crisman, UVA Architecture School students built the vessel they collaboratively designed. The 120- by 32-foot steel barge is totally off the grid and known as one of America’s greenest vessels.
The Learning Barge is a floating classroom on the Elizabeth River in Portsmouth, built in collaboration with UVA’s School of Architecture. (Contributed photo)
Dunbar’s new role as an environmental sustainability and resilience practitioner fellow will end in December. While on Grounds, she will work on student engagement and guest lecture for the Global Studies program and the Environmental Institute.
On the Learning Barge, students learn about sustainability practices like producing energy from sun and wind, collecting rainwater, filtering gray water using native plants in an onboard wetland and using recycled materials and green technologies.
The barge is powered by solar panels and wind turbines. Rainwater is collected from the roof and filtered for use onboard. Students manually pump this water into a clear basin – seeing their water use in real time while washing their hands to learn about water conservation, according to Dunbar.
“Our wild idea seemed like an impossible experiment, but we made it happen with the Elizabeth River Project and so many generous and enthusiastic partners,” Crisman said. “Years of UVA architecture studios and construction workshops, followed by a hot summer working at the Chesapeake shipyard with 16 students, produced a self-sufficient vessel that has brought the river community together and achieved so much over these past 15 years.”

