Earlier this month, a 575-sf patch of concrete was poured as part of a public space known as the Paseo, inside One Boston Wharf Road, a 707,000-sf 17-story building in Boston’s Seaport district that is scheduled for completion later this year. Amazon will be the building’s sole tenant.
What makes this newsworthy, you ask? Well, for one thing, One Boston Wharf Road, developed by WS Development, will be Beantown’s largest Net Zero Carbon office building. Its goal is to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by more than 90 percent below code requirements and eliminate 5.1 million pounds of CO2 annually. (WS Development recently announced that it had purchased renewably generated electricity for all electric power used by its Seaport portfolio.)
Also see: AGC releases decarbonization playbook to help assess, track, reduce GHG emissions
The concrete installation represents the first commercial application of low-carbon cement manufactured by Sublime Systems, a business that the Massachusetts Institute of Technology spun out as an enterprise in 2010.
Production of cement currently accounts for 8 percent of global CO2 emissions, mostly caused by the intense temperatures required to make cement clinker from limestone, a common ingredient in concrete. Sublime Systems, which is based in Somerville, Mass., claims that its Sublime Cement, the product's marketing name, avoids traditional cement’s major emissions sources, limestone feedstock and fossil-fueled kilns, by applying electrochemistry to extract cementitious ingredients from non-carbonate materials, without degrading the properties that make concrete the most-used building material worldwide.
Sublime Systems’ technology makes ASTM C1157-compliant cement, a drop-in replacement for Portland Cement in concrete. The company, which was incorporated four years ago, has raised more than $140 million from tech investors, and cooperative agreements with several U.S. Department of Energy programs. The company’s pilot plant has a 250-ton annual production capacity, and Sublime Systems is developing a 30,000-ton capacity commercial facility that will open in Holyoke, Mass., in early 2026.
“We and Sublime share the same vision and mission,” said Yanni Tsipis, a Senior Vice President at WS Development and a lecturer at the MIT Center for Real Estate. “We have an opportunity to showcase the most forward—thinking low-carbon building technology on the planet in the public space, at the heart of the building. This partnership epitomizes the value of technology transfer from incubator to industry.”
Educating the public about lowering carbon

The floor of the Paseo, in which Sublime Cement is installed, will be marked with educational material explaining the significance of decarbonized cement in the battle against climate change. The Paseo will lead to a new 1.5-acre park called The Rocks at Harbor Way that will be the focal point of a one-third-mile promenade that connects to the water’s edge. (James Corner Field Operations came up with this concept for Harbor Way.) One Boston Wharf Road will feature 77,000 sf of retail space.
One Boston Wharf Road is adjacent to 11 Harbor Way, a 525,000-sf, 17-story office tower that WS Development completed in the spring of 2022.
Related Stories
| May 30, 2012
Construction milestone reached for $1B expansion of San Diego International Airport
Components of the $9-million structural concrete construction phase included a 700-foot-long, below-grade baggage-handling tunnel; metal decks covered in poured-in-place concrete; slab-on-grade for the new terminal; and 10 exterior architectural columns––each 56-feet tall and erected at a 14-degree angle.
| May 29, 2012
Reconstruction Awards Entry Information
Download a PDF of the Entry Information at the bottom of this page.
| May 24, 2012
2012 Reconstruction Awards Entry Form
Download a PDF of the Entry Form at the bottom of this page.
| May 15, 2012
One World Trade Center goes to new height of sustainability
One of the biggest challenges in developing this concrete mixture was meeting the Port Authority of New York/New Jersey’s strict requirement for the replacement of cement.
| May 11, 2012
CRSI appoints Brace chairman
Stevens also elected to board of directors and vice-chair.
| May 9, 2012
Stoddert Elementary School in DC wins first US DOE Green Ribbon School Award
Sustainable materials, operational efficiency, and student engagement create high-performance, healthy environment for life-long learning.
| May 7, 2012
2012 BUILDING TEAM AWARDS: TD Ameritrade Park
The new stadium for the College World Series in Omaha combines big-league amenities within a traditional minor league atmosphere.
| May 1, 2012
Construction is underway on MLK ambulatory care center in L.A.
Featuring a variety of sustainable features, the new facility is designed to achieve LEED Gold Certification.
| Apr 23, 2012
Innovative engineering behind BIG’s Vancouver Tower
Buro Happold’s structural design supports the top-heavy, complex building in a high seismic zone; engineers are using BIM technology to design a concrete structure with post-tensioned walls.
| Apr 19, 2012
Holcim cement plants recognized at PCA Spring Meeting
The Holly Hill plant received the PCA’s Chairman’s Safety Performance Award in recognition of their exceptional health and safety programs. The Theodore plant received the Environmental Performance Award in recognition of the steps they take beyond those required by laws, regulations and permits to minimize their impact on the environment.