BuildingGreen Report

News Brief

January 1, 1995
The Ultimate Green Building Checklist

Environmental Code of Practice for Buildings and Their Services by S. P. Halliday. Published May, 1994 by The Building Services Research and Information Association (BSRIA), Old Bracknell Lane West, Bracknell, Berkshire, RG12 7AH, United Kingdom; 44-344-426511, 44-344-487575 (fax). Cost is £45 (about $70)... Read more

News Analysis

January 1, 1995
Cellulose Expands Despite High Material Costs

According to a market study of cellulose insulation in the November issue of

Resource Recycling, manufacturers have been struggling to keep up with the demand for cellulose insulation over the past year, even as the price of recycled newspaper has skyrocketed. Because of price increases,... Read more

News Brief

January 1, 1995

Carrier Corporation is the only building products manufacturer to receive a 1994 Stratospheric Ozone Protection Award from the U.S. EPA. Carrier won the award for developing the first residential central air-conditioner to run on a chlorine-free refrigerant, HFC-134a (a hydrofluorocarbon). The company was simultaneously cited for its new... Read more

Op-Ed

January 1, 1995
Carpets Can Be Toxic

I would like to offer some comments about your recent Carpeting article (EBN, November/December 1994). First of all, there seems to be a movement afoot in some circles to discredit the work of Dr. Anderson. She and her work have been well respected since she founded her laboratory in 1987. Suddenly, rumors are circulating... Read more

News Analysis

January 1, 1995
Mainstream Architects Going Green

Hellmuth, Obata & Kassabaum, Inc. (HOK), the nation’s largest architecture/engineering firm, has some initiatives underway that suggest a growing commitment to environmentally sensitive design.

The company has retained Christine Hammer of Sustainable Design Resources on a half-time basis to serve as... Read more

Product Review

January 1, 1995
The White Panther

Strikes Back

Update: (October 24, 2005)

To the best of our knowledge, this product is no longer available.

Owens Corning, long famous for its pink fiberglass, has just introduced a new fiberglass. And it’s white. The company calls their revolutionary Miraflex™ fiber “the first new form of glass fiber in... Read more

Feature

January 1, 1995

Decisions about insulation are among the most important you will make relative to the environmental impact of buildings. Because insulation reduces the energy consumption, it provides ongoing environmental benefits throughout a building’s life. However, not all insulation materials are equal environmentally.

In assessing the... Read more

News Brief

January 1, 1995
Creating Communities That Work

by Peter Katz. McGraw-Hill, Inc., New York, 1994. Hardcover, 288 pages, $49.95.

The New Urbanism is one of the most important books to have appeared on what is emerging as a new paradigm in land-use planning and community design. Sometimes referred to as “neotraditional town planning,” this school of... Read more

News Brief

November 1, 1994

A calendar describing the history and importance of the once-vast longleaf pine forests in the southeastern United States has been put together by Carol Goodwin and Julie Moore in Gainesville, Florida.

Longleaf Legacies is a well-illustrated, informational calendar designed to help the user understand the ecology of this species, the... Read more

News Analysis

November 1, 1994
Certified Wood from Seven Islands Forests

It is now possible for environmentally concerned architects and builders to specify and buy framing lumber, white cedar shingles, and hardwood flooring that have been independently certified to be from well-managed forests. The Seven Islands Land Company, headquartered in Bangor, Maine, has just... Read more

News Brief

November 1, 1994

The National Audubon Society headquarters building in New York City was received the Governor’s Award for Energy Excellence this past October. The building was originally constructed in the 1890s, and an extensive renovation by Audubon was completed in 1992. Today, the building is a showcase of environmentally responsible commercial building... Read more

News Analysis

November 1, 1994
Commercial Building Energy Use on the Rise

According to a new report by the U.S. Department of Energy’s Energy Information Administration, energy demand in the commercial building sector grew by 1.0% per year during the 1980s, second only to transportation, which grew at 1.4% per year. In 1989, commercial buildings consumed 5.8 quads of energy... Read more

News Brief

November 1, 1994
Green Buildings Reaching

for the Sky

Bioclimatic Skyscrapers by Ken Yeang, 1994. Artemis London Limited, England (North American distribution by Scovill Petterson Inc., 141 Fifth Ave. New York, NY 10010; 212/673-6090, 212/673-6603–fax). 150 pages, $39.95.

An ecological skyscraper may seem like an oxymoron, but Ken Yeang hasn’t... Read more

Op-Ed

November 1, 1994
Load-Bearing Straw-Bale Houses are Happening

As a result of your September/October 1994 “Straw-bale Construction Advancing in New Mexico” article, we have been getting calls from confused people wondering if they must give up on the idea of having a load-bearing straw-bale house.

Fortunately, I can tell them we are not as pessimistic in... Read more

Product Review

November 1, 1994
Clivus Multrum Trail-Head

The new Clivus Trail-Head® is a self-contained composting toilet for use in outdoor recreation areas: nature centers, picnic areas, boat-access sites, trailheads, campgrounds, etc.

The aptly named privy works exactly like the company’s well-known composting toilets that convert human wastes into a nutritive... Read more

News Brief

November 1, 1994

The State of California has banned the use of “regrind” or recycled plastic resin for use in ABS drain-waste-vent pipe. The new law stemmed from major problems with pipe failure of recycled-content ABS pipe made by several companies during the 1980s. For some homeowners, repairs cost tens of thousands of dollars since all D-W-V pipe had to be... Read more

News Brief

November 1, 1994

Tree Talk has lowered the price of the

Woods of the World computer database to $149. The CD-ROM-based database was reviewed in EBN (

Vol. 3, No. 4) and is continually being improved, according to Berne Broudy of Tree Talk.

News Brief

November 1, 1994

Gridcore Systems International dedicated the world’s first full-scale production facility for Gridcore on November 1, 1994, in Long Beach, California. The plant, which has been in production since April, employs 30 workers and produces a structural building panel out of recycled fiber—primarily cardboard, newsprint, and urban wood waste (see... Read more

News Analysis

November 1, 1994
The Siberian Timber Debate

Whether we should import raw logs from Siberian forests has sparked a hot debate among environmentalists and the wood products industry. Russia is hoping to boost its weak economy by exporting raw logs from Siberia’s vast forests. Some U.S. wood products companies see this as a way to make up for the loss in... Read more

News Brief

November 1, 1994
Newsbriefs

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has completed a nationwide county-by-county survey of radon in buildings and produced a map showing relative risk. The study found the highest radon levels in the western mountain states, upper Midwest, Appalachian Mountain states, and Maine. The Southeast across to Texas and Pacific Northwest... Read more