BuildingGreen Report

News Brief

April 3, 2006

A study sponsored by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has found no safe level of ground-level ozone, a component of smog linked to respiratory problems. The study, carried out by researchers at Yale and Johns Hopkins universities and published by

Environmental Health... Read more

News Brief

April 3, 2006

A Rhode Island court found Sherwin Williams Co., Millennium Holdings, and NL Industries liable in February 2006 for creating a public nuisance by making lead-based paint before it was banned in 1978. Although the judge dismissed punitive damage claims, the jury ordered the companies to abate lead-based paint on an estimated 240,000 Rhode Island... Read more

News Brief

April 3, 2006

Global Green USA, the U.S. affiliate of Green Cross International, has awarded two of its annual Millennium Awards to green building champions: William McDonough, FAIA, founding principal of William McDonough+Partners and cofounder of McDonough Braungart Design Chemistry, and Thomas C. Leppert, chair and CEO of Turner Construction. Also... Read more

News Brief

April 3, 2006
The Lewis and Clark State Office Building, home to the Missouri Department of Natural Resources, achieved 53 points in the U.S. Green Building Council’s LEED® for New Construction Rating System, earning a Platinum rating. Located in Jefferson City, Missouri, the 120,000 ft2 (11,148 m2) building restores the former site of a state surplus property... Read more

News Brief

April 3, 2006

The Building and Social Housing Foundation (BSHF) is inviting applications to its 21st World Habitat Awards, designed to recognize “practical, innovative, and sustainable solutions to current housing issues faced by countries of the global South as well as the North,” according to BSHF. “Projects are sought that view the term ‘habitat’ from a... Read more

News Brief

April 3, 2006

The International Code Council (ICC) has developed Coastal Construction Flood Plain Inspector certification, which indicates “knowledge of general construction provisions, special high wind and load path continuity, special flood hazard areas, detached and accessory structures, and governmental regulations.” Certified individuals will be able... Read more

Product Review

April 3, 2006
Dense, hard, and water-resistant, PaperStone™ is similar to other solid-surface materials made with phenolic resin and cellulosic fibers. It can be used in any number of applications—to date it has found use most commonly as countertops, toilet partitions, and the exterior panels in rainscreen siding systems. Two things differentiate PaperStone... Read more

News Analysis

April 3, 2006

Recognizing the role of construction in the global economy and planetary ecology, in February 2006 the United Nations Environment Program (UNEP) launched the Sustainable Building and Construction Initiative (SBCI). Part of UNEP’s Division of Technology, Industry, and Economics (DTIE), SBCI will establish global baselines for green building,... Read more

Op-Ed

April 3, 2006

BuildingGreen, Inc., is pleased to announce an agreement with McGraw-Hill Construction through which we will provide editorial guidance and articles for an upcoming magazine called

GreenSource. In addition to content for the magazine, BuildingGreen will provide strategic consulting and information to McGraw-Hill Construction’s Web-based... Read more

News Brief

April 3, 2006
by Erik Reece. Riverhead Books, New York City, 2006. Hardcover, 251 pages, $24.95.

“You can think of any mountain in Appalachia as a geological layer cake with seams of coal two to 15 feet thick, separated by much thicker bands of sandstone, slate, and shale,” explains Erik Reece in

Lost Mountain, which describes mountaintop-removal... Read more

News Brief

April 3, 2006
The National Building Museum in Washington, D.C., will open “The Green House: New Directions in Sustainable Architecture and Design” on May 20, 2006. The exhibition will feature descriptions of 22 homes from around the world, a full-size green home, and a resource room with building-material information, including a kiosk featuring our

... Read more

News Brief

April 3, 2006

The Northeast Sustainable Energy Association (NESEA) has developed the Zero-Energy Building Award program to recognize energy-efficient projects designed for the Northeast climate. To be eligible, buildings must be located in the Northeast (including New England, New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware, and Maryland), be occupied, and... Read more

News Brief

March 1, 2006

California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger’s administration launched the Green California website, www.green.ca.gov, in February 2006. Rosario Marin, secretary of the State and Consumer Services Agency, hopes the site will become “the primary ’go-to’ site—the new, centralized, electronic reference library—for engineers, architects, building... Read more

News Analysis

March 1, 2006

As early as 2007, there may be a new minimum standard for green buildings. The American Society of Heating, Refrigerating, and Air-Conditioning Engineers, Inc. (ASHRAE), U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC), and Illuminating Engineering Society of North America (IESNA) announced in February 2006 that they will cosponsor the development of ASHRAE... Read more

News Brief

March 1, 2006

Whole Foods Market, Inc., a Fortune 500 company based in Austin, Texas, has purchased more than 458,000 megawatt-hours of wind energy credits to offset all of the electricity used in its stores, facilities, bake houses, distribution centers, regional offices and national headquarters in the U.S. and Canada. The two-year contract with Renewable... Read more

News Brief

March 1, 2006

Downtown populations in the U.S. grew 10% in the 1990s, according to a Brookings Institution report, following 20 years of overall decline. The study, “Who Lives Downtown,” presents findings related to downtown population, household, and income trends in 44 cities from 1970 to 2000. The study is online at www.brookings.edu (search for “... Read more

News Brief

March 1, 2006
by James Howard Kunstler. Atlantic Monthly Press, New York, 2005. Hardcover, 316 pages, $23.

The Long Emergency is one of the most sobering—no, frightening—books about the future that you’re likely to come across. Author James Kunstler, whose books

The Geography of Nowhere and

Home From Nowhere take a scathing look at suburbia,... Read more

News Analysis

March 1, 2006
The Greenguard Environmental Institute, Inc. (GEI) has launched the Mold Protection Program™, the nation’s first program to certify the design, construction, and operation of buildings for protection against mold. “We hear so much about the financial costs of mold, including the loss of rent along with the costly cleanups that result,” says Carl... Read more

News Brief

March 1, 2006

In January 2006, New York City’s New School opened the Tishman Environment and Design Center, which will offer an undergraduate program in environmental studies. “One of the distinguishing characteristics of the Center will be the critical role of design,” says Joel Towers, former director of sustainable design at the Parsons School of Design... Read more

Op-Ed

March 1, 2006

The argument is really fairly simple. Fossil fuel supplies are limited. World oil production will soon peak—if it has not already—beginning an inexorable decline in output and increase in cost. The same goes for natural gas, though its transition from plenitude to shortage may be even more abrupt.

The best way to extend the availability... Read more