BuildingGreen Report

News Brief

October 1, 2004

Ten years ago, when the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) opened their doors in Oaxaca, Mexico,

Environmental Building News welcomed it as an organization with “the potential to become the global watchdog of forest management through an entirely voluntary process” (see

EBN

Vol. 3, No. 5). We also pointed out controversy... Read more

News Analysis

October 1, 2004

College Publishing of Glen Allen, Virginia has announced that the inaugural edition of the

Journal of Green Building will be published in Spring 2005. The peer-reviewed, technical journal will “provide a high-quality, interdisciplinary forum for advancing the state of knowledge about green building and high performance, sustainable... Read more

News Brief

October 1, 2004

Turner Construction Company has released the results of an online survey of more than 700 building owners, developers, architects, engineers, and green building consultants. Conducted by Bayer Consulting, LLC, during July 2004, the survey revealed that 93% of executives already working on green projects expect their green business to increase... Read more

Op-Ed

October 1, 2004

I wanted to tell you that my ease in passing the LEED® Accredited Professional test is in large part due to my loyal reading of your newsletter for the last several years. Thanks for your excellent coverage of green issues.

Sarah Nettleton, AIA

Sarah Nettleton Architects

Minneapolis, MN

Editors’ Response: Reading... Read more

News Brief

October 1, 2004

U.S. Green Building Council membership reached 5,000 on September 2, when Ro-Bar Technical Services, LLC of Boise, Idaho joined the organization. Membership had reached 4,000 in February 2004 (see EBN

Vol. 13, No. 3).

News Analysis

October 1, 2004

Environmental life-cycle assessment (LCA) is often tagged as a solution to many technical shortcomings of LEED®. On September 29, 2004, with support from Wayne Trusty, President of the Athena™ Sustainable Materials Institute, USGBC convened a meeting of industry groups and LCA database and tool developers to establish a plan for incorporating... Read more

News Analysis

October 1, 2004
When Congress passed the Community Renewal Tax Relief Act in 2000, it devoted $15 billion in tax credits to development in America’s low-income neighborhoods. It never said anything about green building. But the Portland Development Commission (PDC), the city’s redevelopment agency, and the Portland Family of Funds (PFF), a community investment... Read more

Feature

October 1, 2004
I do most of my focused writing in my home office—where I’m sitting now. I used to think that I liked to work at home because it was free from most distractions, but as I learn more about the relationship between the spaces where we work and our productivity and creativity, I’m becoming convinced that there are many other reasons. The view of... Read more

News Brief

October 1, 2004

The U.S. General Services Administration (GSA) has updated its Construction Waste Management Database, housed on the Whole Building Design Guide Web site, to help reduce the amount of construction and demolition waste going to incinerators and landfills. Waste haulers, processors, and recyclers are also encouraged to advertise on the Web site.... Read more

News Brief

October 1, 2004

Sixteen hundred new San Francisco homes will be built to save energy, lowering expenses for their low-income owners, according to a memorandum of understanding between the San Francisco Public Utilities Commission and developer Lennar/BVHP, LLC. The homes will be built on a 78-acre (32 ha) plot of the Hunters Point Naval Shipyard, which the U.S... Read more

Product Review

Radically different from conventional pressure-treated lumber, TimberSIL relies on an inorganic mineralization process, rather than toxicity, to protect lumber from decay and attack by insects.

October 1, 2004

Virtually all of the chemicals used in pressure-treated wood—CCA (chromated copper arsenate), ACQ (ammonium copper quaternary), copper azole, and even borates—are formulated to do one thing: kill organisms that decay or eat wood. It stands to reason that chemicals selected for their toxicity might also affect humans and ecosystems. Most uses of... Read more

Product Review

With the help of McDonough Braungart Design Chemistry, MechoShade designed their new PVC-free shade screen as a "technical nutrient" that can be recycled indefinitely.

October 1, 2004

Following six years of development, MechoShade Systems, Inc., the shade screen industry leader, has introduced a new product aimed directly at the green market. Their PVC-free EcoVeil™—made of a new thermoplastic olefin (TPO) yarn called EarthTex™, developed by MechoShade’s textile partner, the Twitchell™ Corporation—is the first solar shade... Read more

News Brief

September 1, 2004
David Butterfield

, president of the nonprofit Trust for Sustainable Development and founder of the Villages of Loreto Bay in Baja California Sur, has been given the

Good Neighbor Award by the U.S.-Mexico Chamber of Commerce, a nonprofit bilateral coalition of businesspeople working to promote trade, investment, and joint ventures on... Read more

News Brief

September 1, 2004
One of every three single-family homes in the Windy City is a

Chicago Bungalow, constructed by the tens of thousands in the early 1900s to house the city’s working class. Bungalow owners can now take advantage of matching grants from the Chicago Department of Environment for up to $2,000 toward improvements in windows, doors, and insulation,... Read more

News Analysis

September 1, 2004

U.S. Plastic Lumber (USPL) filed voluntary petitions for bankruptcy in late July 2004. The company is seeking debtor-in-possession financing, available only to companies in Chapter 11, to support its current operations and has hired Triax Capital Advisors to direct its reorganization. “Our filing provides U.S. Plastic Lumber with the... Read more

News Brief

September 1, 2004

The Natural Resources Defense Council

Robert Redford Building in Santa Monica, California has won a

Charter Award from the Congress for the New Urbanism (CNU). The building, designed by Moule & Polyzoides Architects and Urbanists, simultaneously addresses green building and New Urbanist concerns (see

EBN

Vol... Read more

News Brief

September 1, 2004
Old plaster may contain arsenic

, warns an article in the July 2004 issue of the

Journal of Light Construction (JLC). According to Kevin Hansen, who recently investigated abandoned tannery sites in the Wilmington, Delaware region for Tetra Tech, Inc., the leather-making industry used to soak animal hides in a slurry of lime and arsenic... Read more

News Analysis

September 1, 2004

Formaldehyde is a human carcinogen, according to a new report from the World Health Organization (WHO) International Agency for Research on Cancer. The agency upgraded its evaluation of formaldehyde from a probable carcinogen to a known one after the release of new evidence that formaldehyde causes nasopharyngeal cancer in humans. Based on... Read more

News Brief

September 1, 2004

Seattle’s

Environmental Home Center (EHC), profiled in “Getting the ‘Right Stuff’: A Guide to Green Building Materials Retailers” (EBN

Vol. 10, No. 4), lost its main warehouse, showroom, and offices to a fire on August 11, 2004. Two warehouses remain standing, however, and the company has laid out an aggressive recovery plan in... Read more

News Brief

September 1, 2004
The Party’s Over: Oil, War, and the Fate of Industrial Societies by Richard Heinberg; New Society Publishers, Gabriola Island, British Columbia, 2003; 286 pages, softcover, $17.95

Power to the People: How the Coming Energy Revolution Will Transform an Industry, Change Our Lives, and Maybe Even Save the Planet by Vijay Vaitheeswaran; Farrar,... Read more