BuildingGreen Report

News Brief

July 31, 2006

The Chicago City Council established the Green Roof Improvement Fund in June 2006, which will encourage owners of existing downtown buildings to retrofit them with green roofs. The $500,000 fund will match the investments made by building owners, up to $100,000 per project. “With more green roofs than any other city in the United States,... Read more

News Brief

July 31, 2006

Ten years ago,

EBN reported on the growing popularity of low-emissivity (low-e) glazing, which allows visible light to enter buildings while reducing unwanted heat gain and heat loss. Introduced in the early 1980s, with the energy crisis still fresh in America’s mind, low-e glazing gained market share quickly, and by July 1996 the... Read more

News Analysis

July 31, 2006
Perfluorooctanoic acid, better known as PFOA or C8, has appeared in blood samples in polar bears, pregnant women across the U.S., and Chinese villagers. It is extremely resistant to breakdown, it is bioaccumulative, and an advisory panel to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has called it a “likely carcinogen” (see

EBN

Vol.... Read more

News Brief

July 31, 2006
Jason McLennan, principal at BNIM Architects, founder and director of Elements, BNIM’s sustainable design consulting division, and founder of Ecotone Publishing, has been named CEO of the Cascadia Region Green Building Council, a chapter of both the U.S. and Canada Green Building Councils. McLennan will maintain a limited role at Elements and... Read more

News Brief

July 31, 2006

A panel of the National Academies of Science (NAS) has concluded that low doses of dioxin might not be as carcinogenic as the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) claimed in a 2003 draft risk assessment. When EPA first published an assessment of dioxin, in 1985, it labeled the chemical a “probable human carcinogen.” EPA upgraded the... Read more

News Brief

July 31, 2006

Building materials giant USG Corporation has joined the Alliance for Sustainable Built Environments, a group launched in 2003 to educate the marketplace and top management on the benefits of reducing the impact of facilities on the environment and building occupants. “By joining the Alliance, USG can work with like-minded companies to help... Read more

News Brief

July 9, 2006
New York City’s first office tower to earn LEED® certification from the U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC), 7 World Trade Center has earned a Gold rating in LEED for Core and Shell (LEED-CS). USGBC President and CEO Rick Fedrizzi congratulated the project team, noting that the building “will help us use the language of architecture to build a... Read more

News Brief

July 9, 2006
Carpet Monsters and Killer Spores: A Natural History of Toxic Moldby Nicholas P. Money. Oxford University Press, New York City, 2004. Hardcover, 178 pages, $19.95.

My Office is Killing Me!: The Sick Building Survival Guideby Jeffrey C. May. Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, 2006. Paperback, 317 pages, $18.95.

In 2000,... Read more

News Analysis

July 9, 2006

If a proposed regulation from the California Air Resources Board (CARB) is adopted as planned on September 28, 2006, the U.S. market for particleboard and similar interior-grade panel products will change dramatically. The proposed regulation drastically reduces the allowable levels of urea-formaldehyde (UF) emissions from composite wood... Read more

News Brief

July 9, 2006

Behnisch, Behnisch & Partner in Stuttgart, Germany, under the leadership of Stefan Behnisch, is now Behnisch Architekten. The firm’s Venice, California, office, led by Stefan Behnisch and Christof Jantzen, AIA, has also changed its name, to Behnisch Architects. Founded in 1989, the firm has long been recognized as a leader in architectural... Read more

News Brief

July 9, 2006

In May 2006, the U.S. Senate confirmed Dirk Kempthorne to succeed Gale Norton as head of the Department of the Interior, which manages 20% of all land in the U.S. Kempthorne, who has served in the U.S. Senate and as governor of Idaho, has worked to open national lands to logging, mining, and drilling; the League of Conservation Voters (LCV)... Read more

Product Review

July 9, 2006
The availability of recovered wood from a variety of sources is growing, but the wood is often expensive, the quality varies, and, at least in the case of riverbed recovery, there can be a negative environmental impact from disturbing sediments. Triton Logging, Inc., of Saanichton, British Columbia, promises a recovered lumber resource that is... Read more

News Analysis

July 9, 2006
On June 12, 2006, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Administrator Stephen Johnson announced the launch of WaterSense, EPA’s new water efficiency program, noting that the program’s aim is “spreading the ethic of water efficiency and promoting the tools to make wise water choices.” Like EPA’s successful Energy Star™ program for energy-... Read more

News Brief

July 9, 2006
The International Interior Design Association (IIDA) has announced the winners of its first annual

Smart Environments Awards. Co-sponsored by

Metropolis magazine, the awards were intended to recognize the most environmentally and socially responsible, beautiful, and functional interior designs of the past five years. The winners are:... Read more

News Brief

July 9, 2006
A McDonald’s restaurant in Savannah, Georgia, has achieved a Gold rating in the U.S. Green Building Council’s LEED® rating system for Core and Shell (LEED-CS) development. Designed by Adams + Associates Architecture in Mooresville, North Carolina, and developed by Melaver, Inc., the first-ever LEED-certified McDonald’s features bike racks, porous... Read more

News Analysis

July 9, 2006

The U.S. Conference of Mayors, which represents the 1,183 U.S. cities with populations of 30,000 or more, has called for all new buildings and major renovation projects to be climate neutral by 2030. The Conference unanimously adopted Resolution 50, “Adopting the ‘2030 Challenge’ for All Buildings,” during its 74th annual meeting, in June 2006... Read more

News Brief

July 9, 2006

Two projects under development, one in Boston, Massachusetts, and one in Cabinda, Angola, were among the projects recognized in June at the fourteenth Congress for the New Urbanism (CNU) in Providence, Rhode Island. CNU’s 2006 Charter Awards recognize work that demonstrates an understanding of urbanism and the principles embodied in the CNU... Read more

News Brief

July 9, 2006

An upscale Tahoe Vista, California, restaurant, Wild Goose, recently became the first restaurant to receive certification from the U.S. Green Building Council’s LEED® rating system for commercial interiors (LEED-CI). CCS Architecture, of San Francisco, remodeled the 10,000 ft2 (930 m2) restaurant for East West Partners. Among Wild Goose’s... Read more

News Brief

July 9, 2006
Virginia San Fratello and collaborators Ronald Rael and Isaiah Dunlap won the third annual Next Generation Award, sponsored by

Metropolis magazine, for their Hydro Wall design. Hydro Wall is a series of flexible bladders designed to store rainwater within a building’s walls. The water could be used for irrigation, flushing toilets, and a range... Read more

News Brief

July 9, 2006
Launched by the U.S. Green Building Council in August 2005, the LEED® for Homes (LEED-H) pilot rating system now has its first certified home. Built by Ideal Homes, Inc., and certified by LEED-H provider Guaranteed Watt Saver Systems, Inc., the LEED-H Certified home is located in the Valencia neighborhood of Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. The 1,640 ft2... Read more