News Analysis
Air Quality Sciences, Inc., has released a School Test Kit that measures asthma triggers, including formaldehyde, other volatile organic chemicals (VOCs), and dust mite allergens. Nearly one in 13 school-aged children in the U.S. suffers from asthma, according to the company. Details are online at www.aqs.com.
News Brief
announced the winners of the
C2C Housing Design and Construction Competition (see
EBN
Vol. 13, No. 4) at the Art Museum of Western Virginia in January 2005. The competition to design innovative affordable housing was inspired by the principles laid out in... Read more
News Brief
The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) announced the winners of its 11th annual EnergyValue Housing Awards at the International Builders’ Show in Orlando, Florida, in January 2005. Funded through DOE’s Building America Program and the National Renewable Energy Laboratory, with support from several private sponsors, including BuildingGreen, Inc.,... Read more
News Analysis
NAHB Model Green Home Building Guidelines. Austin, Texas, homebuilder Ray Tonjes, chair of NAHB’s Green Building Subcommittee, presented the Guidelines as “a milestone in our efforts to provide safe,... Read more
Op-Ed
Boosting the rate of recycling in this country and increasing the use of recycled material in building products has remained an uphill challenge for one primary reason: we undervalue energy and virgin resources. Leading-edge “green” companies that strive to maximize use of recycled content do so for many reasons: because it helps them meet... Read more
News Brief
When Ed Ehlen paid $19,000 to purchase and install artificial turf at his new home in Florida’s upscale Marco Island community, he thought he was doing an environmental service. “We have such a water problem in Southwest Florida,” Ehlen told the
News-Press. And with artificial turf, he said, “you don’t have to water. You don’t have to... Read more
News Analysis
The member nations of the European Union (EU) have begun trading the right to emit carbon dioxide (CO
2), a global-warming gas and the chief culprit in climate change. The Emissions Trading Directive, begun in a pilot phase on January 1, 2005, was planned as a keystone in the EU’s bid to comply with the Kyoto Protocol. Industry critics... Read more
News Brief
The American Public Health Association, representing more than 50,000 researchers, health-service providers, administrators, teachers, and other health workers, has called for a phaseout of all polybrominated diphenyl ether (PBDE) flame retardants, including the widely used deca-BDE. The organization made its recommendation in light of “... Read more
News Analysis
News Brief
Following a “tough underwriting reception,” the environmental home-improvement television series
Build It Green! (see
EBN
Vol. 12, No. 12) is once again on track after the nonprofit GreenBlue (see
EBN
Vol. 12, No. 6) agreed to sign on as fiscal sponsor. The series, to be broadcast nationally on PBS, will... Read more
News Brief
2004 Nathaniel A. Owings Award by The American Institute of Architects’ California Council. Named for the late Nathaniel A. Owings, FAIA, of Skidmore Owings & Merrill, the award recognizes “individuals or groups who have demonstrated... Read more
News Analysis
Following its July 2004 declaration of Chapter 11 bankruptcy (see EBN
Vol. 13, No. 9), U.S. Plastic Lumber (USPL) has announced that it will discontinue its composite lumber product lines and focus exclusively on 100%-plastic products as part of its restructuring plan. The decision means that USPL will discontinue composite decking and... Read more
News Brief
The U.S. Green Building Council has announced the results of the election for its 2005 board of directors. The new members are
Charles Angyal, FAIA, chief architect of Sempra Energy Utilities;
Dan Burgoyne, sustainability manager at the California Department of General Services;
Tim Cole, director of support services at... Read more
News Brief
Pennsylvania became the 16th state to pass a renewable portfolio standard in November 2004, requiring that 18% of the state’s energy come from alternative sources by 2020. More notably, this is the first statewide renewable-energy standard to include a fossil fuel component. The bill defines Tier 1 energy sources as solar, wind, low-impact... Read more
News Brief
News Analysis
Op-Ed
As 2004 winds down and we prepare to go to press with the first issue of 2005, recent global, national, and local events give us pause and an opportunity to reaffirm our commitment to people and the planet. Globally, we’re still reeling from accounts of the devastation caused by the earthquake and tsunamis in South Asia. For nearly a week the... Read more
News Brief
When deciding where to live, Americans’ top priority is being within a 45-minute commute to work, according to the 2004 American Community Survey, sponsored by the National Association of Realtors and Smart Growth America. A short commute is “very” or “somewhat” important to 79% of respondents. The second most important factor, at 75%, was “... Read more
News Brief
In the wake of the U.S. Green Building Council’s April 2004 decision not to allow trade associations to become full members (see EBN
Vol. 13, No. 6), the snubbed organizations have banded together to create “The North American Coalition on Green Building.” This group, which at last count had 34 members but no single point of contact,... Read more
Product Review
® in 1969 and since then has developed a wide range of wall, corner, and door guards. In 2002, one of Acrovyn’s biggest customers—Kaiser Permanente, the nation’s largest health maintenance organization—announced that it would begin requiring... Read more


