BuildingGreen Report

News Brief

June 7, 2006
The American Institute of Architects (AIA) presented its House for an Ecologist awards in May 2006 during the Architecture of Sustainability conference, co-hosted by AIA’s Committee on Design and Committee on the Environment. The contest was born out of the dilemma that sustainability “often is seen as a purely technical or ethical agenda and not... Read more

News Analysis

June 7, 2006
Very little gypsum wallboard made in the U.S. contains gypsum recycled from other wallboard. The recycled content that is included in wallboard is almost universally

synthetic gypsum from coal-burning power plants (a pre-consumer recycled material), and when wallboard scraps are diverted from landfills they are typically ground into soil... Read more

News Brief

June 7, 2006

A $1 billion rush order for the Indonesian tropical hardwood merbau is designated for construction of the 2008 Beijing Olympic sports venues, according to an April 2006

New York Times report. The deal is part of $7 billion China invested in Indonesia last year—much of the investment is going toward replacing valuable ecosystems with... Read more

News Brief

June 7, 2006
The American Institute of Architects (AIA) Housing and Custom Residential Knowledge Community has recognized eight affordable green housing projects in its 2006 “Show You’re Green” awards. Winners were selected based on how they address AIA’s ten affordable green housing guidelines: community context, site design, building design, water... Read more

News Brief

June 7, 2006

Detective James Zadroga’s January 5, 2006, death of respiratory failure is the first to be officially blamed on exposure to dust from the September 11, 2001, collapse of the World Trade Center. “It is felt with a reasonable degree of medical certainty that the cause of death in this case was directly related to the 9/11 incident,” according to... Read more

News Brief

June 7, 2006

In April 2006, Maine became the first state to offer a financial incentive for recycling building thermostats that contain mercury and the first state to mandate thermostat recycling for homeowners. Previous laws banned the sale of new mercury thermostats and required recycling by wholesalers. A minimum $5 incentive will be offered for each... Read more

News Brief

June 7, 2006

The International Interior Design Association (IIDA) has announced the winners of its annual Student Sustainable Design Competition. Bridget Dunn, from Florida State University in Tallahassee, won Best of Competition, and Olena Baranova, from the Academy of Art University in San Francisco, won an Award of Merit. Holly Murdock, from Utah State... Read more

News Brief

June 7, 2006

The American Institute of Architects (AIA) will accept presentation proposals for its 2007 national convention and design exposition, themed “Growing Beyond Green,” through July 1, 2006. The conference will be held May 3-5, 2007, in San Antonio. Details are online at www.aia.org/conted_convention/. For more on AIA’s commitment to green design... Read more

Op-Ed

June 7, 2006

At its May 2006 board meeting in New Orleans, the U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC) board of directors endorsed a series of recommendations for modifying the two credits in the LEED® Rating System that relate to biobased materials. (Full disclosure: I was asked by USGBC to lead this effort, and I wrote the recommendations.) As described... Read more

News Brief

June 7, 2006
Chicago Mayor Richard M. Daley has announced that four wind turbines will be erected on the roof of the Richard J. Daley Center. The machines, Aeroturbines, were invented by Bil Becker, a professor of industrial design at the University of Illinois at Chicago, and manufactured by Aerotecture International, Inc., based in Chicago. The turbines are... Read more

News Analysis

June 7, 2006

Polyvinyl chloride (PVC) and fluorinated ethylene propylene (FEP) dominate the plenum-rated electrical and data cable market (see

EBN

Vol. 13, No. 3), but a newcomer from GE Plastics could offer an intriguing alternative. In December 2005, Underwriters Laboratories, Inc. (UL) listed GE’s Flexible Noryl® resin for wire coating... Read more

News Brief

June 7, 2006
A plague of mountain pine beetles in British Columbia’s lodgepole pine forests has so far claimed 17.3 million acres (7 million ha) of forest. Temperatures in British Columbia haven’t been warmer in 8,000 years, and global warming is unfolding 50 years in advance of forecasts in some areas, Richard Hebda, Ph.D., a curator of botany and earth... Read more

News Analysis

June 7, 2006

A water conservation bill currently moving through the California Legislature would set the maximum water consumption for toilets at 1.3 gallons per flush (gpf; 4.9 lpf). The legislation, Assembly Bill 2496, was authored by John Laird (D–Santa Cruz) and passed the State Assembly on May 15, 2006. If approved by the Senate and signed into law,... Read more

News Brief

June 7, 2006

California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger has called for heavy industries in the state, such as power plants, refineries, and factories, to report emissions of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases that are contributing to global warming. Making the announcement at a San Francisco global warming summit in April 2006, the governor pledged to... Read more

News Brief

June 7, 2006
Established in 2003 by Green Roofs for Healthy Cities, the Green Roof Awards of Excellence recognize leadership in integrated design and implementation of green roof projects. The awards recognize completed projects in extensive and intensive categories—6” (150 mm) or less of growing medium in extensive installations and more than 6” in intensive... Read more

Feature

Tracking the performance of a building's mechanical and electrical systems is essential for energy savings that persist over time.

June 7, 2006

Andy Shapiro noticed something funny when he examined the energy use of the new manufacturing facility for NRG Systems, Inc., in Hinesburg, Vermont: lights were turning on at night when nobody was using the space. The LEED® Gold building’s sophisticated measurement and verification (M&V) system, which records when and where the building... Read more

News Analysis

The U.S. Green Building Council is promoting a plan to expand LEED's recognition of wood while refining its handling of non-wood biobased materials.

June 7, 2006

A new initiative from the U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC) board of directors hopes to bring resolution to the prickly subject of wood in the LEED® Rating System. The timber industry has used its leverage to slow the adoption of LEED by state governments and federal agencies and has sponsored the introduction of a competing rating... Read more

Product Review

Glazing from Sage Electrochromics, Inc., allows users to change its visible light and total solar transmittance properties with the push of a button

June 7, 2006

Sizing and placing of windows has always required balancing the need to provide daylight and views with the need to manage solar heat gain and limit heat loss. “Fundamentally, a static window with fixed properties is almost always a poor compromise between night and day, summer and winter, sunny and overcast,” says Stephen Selkowitz, who heads... Read more

News Brief

May 3, 2006

Although the U.S. used slightly (0.5%) less petroleum in 2005 than it did in record-breaking 2004, the percentage of that petroleum that was imported reached a new high in 2005, according to the U.S. Department of Energy’s Energy Information Administration. Of the 99.84 quadrillion Btus used, a net 59.8% was imported. Of those imports, 17.0%... Read more

News Brief

May 3, 2006
by Bruce King, P.E. 2005, Green Building Press. San Rafael, California. Paperback, 52 pages, $20.

Using coal flyash to replace 50% or more of the portland cement in concrete mixes is a huge opportunity for designers and builders—a way to get better concrete with a significantly smaller ecological footprint (see

EBN

Vol. 8, No. 6... Read more