BuildingGreen Report

Product Review

July 10, 2007
function pop(URL){

win = window.open(URL, "win", "toolbar=no,location=no,directories=no,status=no,menubar=no,scrollbars=yes,resizable=yes,width=740,height=500");

win.focus();

}

Those who remember the 1970s houses with two parallel exterior walls and an airspace between them circulating solar heat around the house may be doing... Read more

News Analysis

July 10, 2007

At its annual convention in Baltimore, Maryland, in June 2007, the Construction Specifications Institute (CSI) announced its forthcoming GreenFormat product data-reporting tool. GreenFormat is a Web-based questionnaire and product listing service that manufacturers can use to report on environmental aspects of their products. BuildingGreen, Inc... Read more

News Brief

July 10, 2007

Both houses of the Connecticut legislature and Governor M. Jodi Rell have approved a bill expanding the state’s ban on pesticide use on school grounds and playing fields. A similar bill, passed in 2005, prohibited the use of pesticides on public and private elementary school grounds starting in 2006, but gave schools until July 2008 to... Read more

News Brief

July 10, 2007
function pop(URL){

win = window.open(URL, "win", "toolbar=no,location=no,directories=no,status=no,menubar=no,scrollbars=yes,resizable=yes,width=740,height=500");

win.focus();

}

The International Code Council (ICC) and the U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC) have agreed to create a green building educational manual for code... Read more

News Brief

July 10, 2007

In passing the 1996 Food Quality Protection Act, Congress required the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to test pesticides for disruption of the human endocrine system, which produces and regulates hormones. After years of delays, EPA announced in June 2007 that it would test 73 pesticides that people commonly encounter in homes and... Read more

News Brief

July 10, 2007

On May 4, 2007, the U.S. Green Building Council expanded a previous ruling regarding Cradle to Cradle (C2C) certification (see

EBN

Vol. 16, No. 5) by endorsing a LEED innovation point proposal from two related certification programs: the SMART Building Product Standard and the California Gold Carpet Standard. As with C2C, these... Read more

Product Review

July 10, 2007
function pop(URL){

win = window.open(URL, "win", "toolbar=no,location=no,directories=no,status=no,menubar=no,scrollbars=yes,resizable=yes,width=740,height=500");

win.focus();

}

Buildings with large expanses of glazing can suffer dramatic cooling energy requirements and create glare problems for occupants. Façade shading systems... Read more

Feature

July 10, 2007

One can hardly pick up a magazine or turn on the television today without hearing something about climate change. The issue finally appears to be gaining traction in our nation’s collective consciousness. Much of the focus of reducing greenhouse gas emissions rightly centers on how we design and construct buildings. Indeed, the 2030... Read more

Explainer

Because of how air-quality regulators define VOCs, judging a product's contribution to indoor air quality using only VOC content can be misleading.

July 10, 2007

The term "volatile organic compound" (VOC) means different things to different people. In high school or college chemistry class we learned that VOCs are a class of carbon-based compounds that readily become volatile (gaseous) under ordinary (atmospheric) conditions. Thus, we learned that VOCs are any of those carbon-based compounds that smell... Read more

News Brief

June 7, 2007

The California Energy Commission (CEC) filed suit against the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) in April 2007 to require DOE to uphold California’s washing machine efficiency standards. In December 2006, DOE denied the State’s 2005 request for a waiver from federal washing machine standards; the waiver would have allowed California to enact... Read more

News Brief

June 7, 2007

The American Institute of Architects, American Society of Heating, Refrigerating, and Air-Conditioning Engineers, Architecture 2030, Illuminating Engineering Society of North America, and U.S. Green Building Council have reached an agreement setting a baseline for the goals of the 2030 Challenge, which calls for an immediate 50% reduction in... Read more

News Analysis

June 7, 2007
Insurers of residential buildings in British Columbia are wary of unfamiliar technologies that may put buildings at risk, particularly since the region experienced the “leaky condo crisis” in the 1990s, when design flaws led to widespread moisture problems. Those problems led to the creation of the Homeowner Protection Office (HPO), a government... Read more

News Brief

June 7, 2007

The American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air-Conditioning Engineers (ASHRAE) has released the first public comment draft of its “Proposed Standard 189, Standard for the Design of High-Performance Green Buildings Except Low-Rise Residential Buildings.” This standard, being developed in conjunction with the Illuminating Engineering... Read more

Feature

June 7, 2007
Few building products are as ubiquitous as carpets and rugs, which cover 70% of U.S. floors, according to the Carpet and Rug Institute, the industry’s trade association. That ubiquity has come with some notoriety, as carpet has been on the front lines of several environmental skirmishes.

Emissions of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) and other... Read more

News Brief

June 7, 2007

New European Union (EU) regulations of harmful chemicals have been toned down and made law. The final version of the Registration, Evaluation, and Authorization of Chemicals (REACH) bill requires that persistent, bioaccumulative, and toxic (PBT), and very persistent, very bioaccumulative (vPvB) chemicals manufactured in or imported into the EU... Read more

News Analysis

June 7, 2007
As it prepares to announce the participants in the pilot program of the LEED for Neighborhood Developments (LEED-ND) rating system, the U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC) is working to turn away a slew of candidates. After hearing from 370 applicants, USGBC hopes to narrow the field to the 120 participants it originally called for.

According to... Read more

News Brief

June 7, 2007
A four-bedroom house in Freeport, Maine, is the first in the Northeast and third in the nation to achieve a Platinum rating in the LEED for Homes pilot rating system from the U.S. Green Building Council. The 3,200-ft2 (300-m2) home was designed by Richard Renner Architects and built by Wright Ryan Construction, both of Portland, Maine. It earned... Read more

Product Review

June 7, 2007
The NightBreeze ventilation cooling system—composed of a special vent damper, an advanced thermostat, sensors, and a highly efficient air handler (or a control board for installation with compatible furnaces)—integrates with a home’s mechanical system to provide high-efficiency air handling for heating and cooling, fresh-air ventilation,... Read more

News Analysis

June 7, 2007

Despite the increasing popularity of green building, research on high-performance building practices and technologies represents a tiny percentage of federally funded research. According to a report released in March 2007 by the Research Committee of the U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC), only 0.2% of federally funded research, an average of... Read more

News Brief

June 7, 2007

Following a successful nine-month pilot program, a mercury-thermostat recycling program is being rolled out nationwide. Created by the independent nonprofit Product Stewardship Institute and the industry-owned nonprofit Thermostat Recycling Corporation, the program works with municipal hazardous waste collection programs to collect thermostats... Read more