BuildingGreen Report

Op-Ed

November 1, 1997
Fueling the Demand for Certified Wood

As we note in our feature article, certification of well-managed forests and the products made from them has gone a long way towards raising the level of debate about forest management practices around the world. In terms of changes to on-the-ground practices, however, the impact of this movement is still... Read more

News Brief

November 1, 1997

King County, Washington is among the more aggressive counties in the use of recycled-content products. The

Recycled Product Procurement Program’s 1997 Annual Report provides an overview of recent accomplishments. Among building-related products, the County used 20,500 tons (18,600 tonnes) of aggregate made from recycled concrete with a... Read more

News Brief

November 1, 1997
Awards & Competitions

Collins Pine, a commercial lumber and wood products company that has been proactive with certification, recently received two awards. President/CEO Jim Quinn received the Second Annual

Millennium Award for Corporate Environmental Leadership from Global Green USA, the U.S. office of Green Cross International,... Read more

Op-Ed

November 1, 1997
We’ve Moved!

About the time you receive this, the

EBN staff will be settling into our new Brattleboro digs. We’ve outgrown the space above Alex’s garage and are moving to one of several renovated industrial buildings that once housed the world-renowned Estey Organ Company. Our corporate name has also been changed from West River... Read more

Product Review

November 1, 1997
Natural-Fiber Erosion-Control Fabrics

Geotextiles have long been used for erosion control on construction sites and along new roads and eroded streambanks. An open matting material is laid down, pinned into the ground, and seeded with grass or other vegetation. Many geotextiles in use today are woven polypropylene or polyethylene, which... Read more

News Brief

November 1, 1997
Newsbriefs

The U.S. Department of Energy has issued new

energy performance standards for room air conditioners, boosting minimum performance by about 10%. For the most common size model, the minimum Energy Efficiency Rating (EER)—the ratio of cooling output per unit of cooling input—will increase from 9.0 to 9.8. The new standards,... Read more

News Brief

November 1, 1997

The Royal Dutch/Shell Group, one of the world’s largest oil and gas companies, announced recently that it would invest $500 million over the next five years in renewable energy technology. The company is setting up a fifth core business,

Shell International Renewables, to broaden its involvement in renewable energy technology, including... Read more

Op-Ed

November 1, 1997
MDI and Worker Safety

I read with interest your July/August issue (Vol. 6, No. 7). I was particularly drawn to your article on Louisiana-Pacific’s new siding line, SmartStart.

While you were accurate in noting that MDI binder is more resistant to moisture and swelling than the competitors’ resin, I would like to comment on your portrayal... Read more

News Brief

November 1, 1997
James Carper

, former editor-in-chief of

Professional Builder magazine, reportedly lost his job after writing an editorial taking issue with the National Association of Homebuilder’s (NAHB) anti-environment stance. Healthy homes builder and author John Bower, writing on the Green-building e-mail discussion group, notes that Carper was... Read more

Feature

November 1, 1997

Third-party certification of forest operations and wood products is picking up steam. Large new tracts of land are being certified, including a number of publicly owned forests. A few forest

managers—as opposed to the lands themselves—now carry blanket certifications, covering any forests they manage. New products are carrying chain-of-... Read more

News Brief

November 1, 1997

Social awareness and recognition of efforts to reduce car-dependence are evident in the

1997 Builder’s Choice Design and Planning Awards, sponsored by Buildermagazine and the American Institute of Architects' Housing Committee. The "Project of the

Year" is a community of mixed housing types in downtown Foster City, California,... Read more

Product Review

Alternatives to halogen lighting

November 1, 1997

The halogen torchiere light fixtures that have been sweeping the lighting world over the past few years are bad news. Not only do they have about the lowest usable-light efficacy (lumens per watt) of any common lighting source—their widespread use in recent years has erased all of the energy savings achieved to date through the use of compact... Read more

News Brief

October 1, 1997

Building products database on CD-ROM for Windows™. The Associa-tion for Environment Conscious Build-ing, Nant-y-Garreg, Saron, Llandysul, Carmarthenshire, SA44 5EJ, UK; 01559 370908 (phone), buildgreen@ aol.com (e-mail). Requires Windows 3.1 or later, 8 MB RAM. £31.50 postpaid (about $19.50).

This green building products database from the U.... Read more

News Analysis

October 1, 1997
Test Methods Approved for Plastic Lumber

Sales of recycled plastic lumber have long been hampered by the lack of reliable data on its strength. Manufacturers who wanted to provide these numbers were stymied by the fact that no uniform testing procedures and standards existed to guide the tests. After four years of work by the Plastic... Read more

Op-Ed

October 1, 1997
How ’bout a Ballast Bounty?

As this issue’s feature article points out, some fluorescent lighting equipment can pose a significant risk to both human health and the environment. Lamps contain mercury, one of our most toxic metals. More significantly, as many as half of the ballasts in use in the U.S.—those made before 1979—contain highly toxic... Read more

Feature

October 1, 1997
The benefits of fluorescent lighting are well known. Fluorescent lights convert electricity into illumination three to five times as efficiently as incandescent lights. Lamp life is far longer. And improvements in fluorescent lighting technology—electronic ballasts and high-quality, tri-chromatic ballasts—make fluorescent lighting a fully... Read more

Product Review

October 1, 1997
Non-ozone-depleting Foam Sealants

First they were produced with CFC-11 blowing agents. Then the CFCs were replaced with HCFCs, which are only 5%-10% as damaging to stratospheric ozone. Now several manufacturers of one-part polyurethane foam sealants are using hydrocarbon blowing agents or a mix of hydrocarbons and non-ozone-depleting HFCs... Read more

News Brief

October 1, 1997
Awards & Competitions

The

Minnesota Office of Environmental Assistance has grants available for projects that will advance environmentally sound practices within construction and demolition activities. Maximum grant amount is $75,000. Projects must take place in Minnesota, but applicants need not be based in the State. Application... Read more

News Analysis

October 1, 1997
New IAQ Standard Shelved

For over six years, a committee of the American Society of Heating, Refrigeration, and Air-conditioning Engineers (ASHRAE) has been working to revise the society’s Standard 62-1989, “Ventilation for Acceptable Air Quality.” While the public review draft of the revision was widely felt by practicing engineers to be a big... Read more

News Analysis

October 1, 1997
New Maytag Washer Shines in Field Test

A unique study and publicity event by the U.S. Department of Energy and Maytag Appliances, in which conventional washing machines were replaced with water-efficient Maytag Neptune washers, demonstrated dramatic water and energy savings. One hundred families—nearly half the tiny rural town of Bern,... Read more