Word: pacillo
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...prospect of this “tour” may conjure up images of the throngs of tourists that inundate the Yard, but Freshmen Dorms Manager Anthony Pacillo told us it is merely a building inspection that will be performed by three Harvard employees...
...Sustainability and Infrastructure in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences’ Office of Physical Resources. “Instead, we will take the best practices from the LEED process and apply them to the other dorms without going for the formal certification.”According to Anthony Pacillo, Senior Manager of Harvard Yard and Freshman Dormitories, increasing sustainability in the dorms is a complex process which includes installing dual-flush toilets, motion sensor lighting, water-saving showerheads, and increased recycling. As Pacillo says, it’s an effort to do “basically whatever...
...many undergraduates who in recent weeks experienced extremely cold temperatures in their rooms as the fall weather set in—sparking complaints over House e-mail lists as students have put the heat on House managers to quickly raise temperatures. But according to Anthony J. Pacillo, manager of freshman dorms, heat in all of the freshman dorms and upperclass Houses was turned on as of earlier this week. “The heat is on in all buildings,” he said. Pacillo said that the heating system is regulated by the outside air temperature. When...
...entire body after bathing and to leave the cream on for 8 to 14 hours. Faciilities and Maintenance Operations cleaned every room in the dormitory, vacuuming all carpets and furniture. “Obviously we’re working on treating it aggressively,” said Anthony J. Pacillo, manager of freshman dormitories. “I think overall we’re very glad we caught it early,” said Faculty of Arts and Sciences spokesman Robert P. Mitchell. Even individuals not directly exposed to scabies risk infection from living in close quarters with those infected...
...Operations expects that replacing the showerheads in the freshman dorms alone will save nearly 2.5 million gallons of water and $40,000 annually. “Anything that we can do to increase energy efficiency within our buildings is being investigated and employed,” said Anthony J. Pacillo, manager of freshman dormitories. But some students maintain the increase in efficiency is coming at the cost of lower water pressure. “The pressure is really bad, a lot worse than it was before,” said Samantha F. Drago ’11, a resident...