BuildingGreen Report

Op-Ed

April 1, 2000
In Defense of Vinyl

The letter from Cliff Goldman, Carnegie Fabrics (

Vol. 9, No. 2), smeared vinyl without offering any evidence to support the allegations. Obviously, Goldman’s main point was to flack his own competing product. I challenge Goldman to offer any credible, scientific evidence that vinyl products harm health or the... Read more

News Brief

April 1, 2000

On April 4, 2000 the San Jose, California City Council approved a series of recommendations aimed at

promoting green building practices in the city. With an estimated $1.4 billion in total value of building permits issued during fiscal year 1997/98, this new program could affect a lot of construction. The recommendations approved by the... Read more

News Analysis

April 1, 2000
Carpet Backing Too Green for the Market?

In an ironic example of a great idea that is struggling commercially, Amoco Fabrics and Fibers Company has created a new carpet backing but is having trouble selling it. Amoco’s AdBac® Composite Backing System has a host of advantages: it is lighter weight, easier to install, and free of the odor (... Read more

Op-Ed

April 1, 2000
Dan Woodbury Promoted to Publisher

We’re pleased to announce that Dan Woodbury is moving from the role of marketing director to that of publisher! Dan has proven himself invaluable in expanding our circulation and helping to produce and sell our other products, and we’re excited that the responsibilities of publisher will now be in such capable... Read more

News Brief

April 1, 2000

In what is believed to be a first, a municipal government in the United States is joining with an international alliance of island nations to combat global warming. The Monroe Board of County Commissioners in the Florida Keys passed a resolution in mid-March acknowledging the likelihood of significant impacts from global warming and agreeing to... Read more

News Analysis

April 1, 2000
Green Mortgages from Fannie Mae

The secondary mortgage lending market is complex and can be confusing. While sale of mortgages on the secondary market can actually limit green options (with the requirements for conventional heating and wastewater systems, for example), it can also be a way of encouraging green—at least if Fannie Mae’s new Green... Read more

Product Review

April 1, 2000
Restoring Forests and Making Flooring

EBN’s usual policy is to encourage only the use of wood products certified to Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) standards, but we recently learned of uncertified flooring that is good for the forest.

Flooring, paneling, and other wood products from Green Mountain Woodworks (GMW) in Southwestern... Read more

Feature

The window industry is struggling with the issue of pressure equalization in sealed insulated glazing when windows are transported over or installed at higher elevations - and some building scientists are concerned that the ultimate loser could well be energy performance.

April 1, 2000

In December 1998, Hurd MillWORK agreed to a $5.3 million class-action settlement relating to claims about R-value in gas-fill windows that were shipped with breather tubes installed. Andersen Windows devotes a full page in this year’s residential product catalog to “High Altitude Glass Considerations.” The window industry is struggling with the... Read more

News Brief

April 1, 2000

Liverpool High School, near Syracuse, New York, has become the first high school to install a fuel cell. The school’s ONSI PC25 fuel cell will be used both as a power source and a teaching tool. Funding was provided, in part, from the state of New York and the U.S. Department of Defense.

 

News Analysis

March 1, 2000

Heliotrope General, Inc., a 25-year-old manufacturer of solar water heating components (see

EBN

Vol. 8, No. 7/8), suffered a devastating fire at its Spring Valley, California facility on January 11. As a result of the fire, company founder and president, Sam Dawson, has decided to retire from the solar industry, and he has sold... Read more

Op-Ed

March 1, 2000

Thank you for your article on building commissioning in

EBN

Vol. 9, No. 2 [February 2000]. This important aspect of the building process is indeed gaining focus throughout the design and construction communities as buildings and their supporting systems become ever more complex and interrelated. As you point out, building codes... Read more

Feature

March 1, 2000
Consistent with the environmental goals and theme of the Deramus Education Pavilion at the Kansas City Zoo, Bob Berkebile and Tom Nelson of BNIM Architects in Kansas City initially included a number of high-end finishes. Surfaces specified for this $16 million project included 100% wool carpet and a floor made from discarded stone fragments from a... Read more

News Brief

March 1, 2000

On March 8, 2000 Berkebile Nelson Immenschuh McDowell (BNIM) Architects of Kansas City created a new division focusing exclusively on green design and consulting. The new “Elements” division will be directed by Jason F. McLennan, who is currently project manager on several green demonstration projects. Elements offers services in programming... Read more

News Brief

March 1, 2000

Roger Babb and his company, Babb International, have been awarded the Spirit of Georgia Award from the State Chamber of Commerce. The honor is given to a Georgia business person who has demonstrated superior ability and courage in the development of an idea into a successful business. Babb International is the only domestic producer of... Read more

News Brief

March 1, 2000

The San Francisco-based Rainforest Action Network (RAN), whose activist tactics are scorned by some in the environmental community but who played a pivotal role in convincing Home Depot to embrace forest certification, has launched a campaign against the home building industry’s use of lumber. RAN argues that home builders use 72% of the nation... Read more

News Brief

March 1, 2000

The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc. (IEEE) has approved a standard for electrical inverters used to connect photovoltaic (PV) generators to the utility grid. John Stevens, Sandia National Laboratories, Albuquerque, New Mexico, chaired the working group, which included about 25 members representing the utility industry,... Read more

News Brief

March 1, 2000

France unveiled a plan on January 20 to fight global warming by raising taxes on industrial energy consumption. Under the plan, taxes will go into effect in 2001, though companies under heavy competitive pressure will be able to avoid the tax by focusing on reducing their greenhouse gas emissions. The plan also aims to improve public transit,... Read more

News Brief

March 1, 2000

Two Wisconsin state agencies, the Department of Consumer Protection and the Department of Health and Family Services, have issued a warning about the use of ozone generators. The February 29 press release singles out Alpine Industries for violating a Federal Trade Commission order and using unsubstantiated health benefits to market ozone... Read more

News Brief

March 1, 2000

by Tom Bender, 2000. Fire River Press, Manzanita, Oregon. Paperback, 123 oversized pages, $27.

Silence, Song, and Shadows lifts me out of my daily engagement with the mundane, material side of environmental building.

The book is a richly illustrated primer into the spirit of place, and the place of spirit, in buildings. (Bender’s... Read more

News Brief

March 1, 2000

Although they represent just 1% of U.S. land cover (an area the size of South Carolina), roads and highways directly affect the ecology of nearly 20% of U.S. land. That is the key finding of research by Richard Foreman at the Harvard Graduate School of Design, reported in the February issue of the journal

Conservation Biology. Foreman... Read more