BuildingGreen Report

News Brief

January 2, 2007
The Cold Climate Housing Research Center (CCHRC) has opened a new 15,000 ft2 (1,400 m2) research and testing facility in Fairbanks, Alaska. The nonprofit CCHRC was founded to research, develop, and test energy-efficient, healthy, and cost-effective building technologies for cold climate regions. The $5 million facility houses classrooms, offices,... Read more

News Brief

January 2, 2007

The Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) has announced the winner of its Designing and Building with FSC Award, which recognizes projects that promote sustainable forestry through their use of FSC-certified wood. The Henry Klein Partnership, Architects, based in Mount Vernon, Washington, won this year’s award for its work on the North Cascades... Read more

News Analysis

January 2, 2007

After coming tantalizingly close to entering national distribution, TimberSIL, the silica-based nontoxic alternative to preservative-treated wood, and the company behind it, Timber Treatment Technologies, Inc. (TTT) of Springfield, Virginia, suffered serious setbacks in 2006. Those problems included the loss of the company’s principal... Read more

News Brief

January 2, 2007

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) announced in November 2006 that it would regulate a form of nanotechnology for the first time. Engineered at the scale of one-billionth of a meter, nanotechnology is now used in over 200 consumer products, according to the nonprofit Project on Emerging Nanotechnologies. EPA has decided that one... Read more

Feature

Rehabilitation of existing buildings is important to sustainability in buildings, but with historic buildings, green building and preservationism can diverge

January 2, 2007

It’s a common saying in the green building movement that “the greenest building is the one that isn’t built.” This ideal may be great, but with growing demand in many parts of the U.S.—and the world—for buildings, it’s often ignored. Meanwhile, millions of buildings already exist but are not being used to their full potential, despite... Read more

Case Study

Planetary Perspectives: Design for labs and offices for a team of climate researchers mimics natural systems to drive down energy use and carbon emissions.

January 2, 2007

This was the first program I’ve seen in which you can tell that someone approached the building with sustainability in mind,” says Scott Shell, of EHDD Architecture, in reference to the client’s concept document for the Department of Global Ecology, a new arm of the Washington, D.C. –based Carnegie Institution. Located alongside the venerable... Read more

Case Study

Circle of Life: A charity dedicated to nourishing families builds a new office as a model of harmony with nature.

January 2, 2007

Heifer international is a nonprofit organization that addresses global problems with an approach founded in sustainability. It gives livestock such as goats, cows, and chickens to families in need as a lasting source of food and income. In 2000, during a period of strong growth and with its 200-plus staff spread across five locations in Little... Read more

News Brief

December 5, 2006
The Emerging Green Builders Chapter of the U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC) announced the winners of its 2006 Natural Talent Design Competition at the Greenbuild conference in Denver, Colorado. This year’s competition was organized on the local level through USGBC chapters and required entrants to design projects for their own communities.... Read more

News Analysis

December 5, 2006
Hoping to transcend the prevailing mindset in the green building community, in which a Platinum score in the U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC) LEED® Rating System is the highest possible achievement, the Cascadia Region Green Building Council, a chapter of both USGBC and the Canada Green Building Council, used Member Day during the November 2006... Read more

News Brief

December 5, 2006

The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) proposed new energy efficiency standards for home furnaces and boilers in October 2006. The standards, which were due in 2004, would require all gas furnaces to achieve a minimum annual fuel utilization efficiency (AFUE) rating of 80%, a level already met by most furnaces on the market today. The current... Read more

Product Review

December 5, 2006
A new concrete admixture could come to replace a variety of waterproofing and corrosion-protection membranes and coatings applied to concrete. Concrete, often strengthened with steel rebar, is porous and hydrophilic, allowing the rebar to corrode through contact with air and water, a process that is exacerbated by mineral salts. To address these... Read more

News Brief

December 5, 2006

Viridian Energy and Environmental, LLC, a new company specializing in energy modeling, green building consulting, and commissioning, was created on November 1, 2006, by four leading consultants from Norwalk, Connecticut-based Steven Winter Associates (SWA). The four—Adrian Tuluca, John Amatruda, Carl Ian Graham, and Vevashish (Dave) Lahiri—... Read more

News Brief

December 5, 2006

Among the many announcements at the 2006 Greenbuild conference was the formation of the Green Cleaning Network, a nonprofit group dedicated to spreading information about green cleaning in hospitals, schools, offices, and other buildings (for more on green cleaning, see

EBN Vol. 14, No. 9). The founding members of the network include... Read more

News Analysis

December 5, 2006
Legislation currently before the Washington, D.C. Council would enact green building requirements for both public and private sector projects, making it the first major U.S. city to do so. Bill B16-05015, the “District of Columbia Green Building Act of 2005,” received unanimous support in a preliminary vote. According to Barry Weise, J.D., a... Read more

News Brief

December 5, 2006

Averting serious climate change would be far cheaper today than dealing with it in the future, according to a report commissioned by the British government and written by Sir Nicholas Stern, chief of Britain’s economic service and former chief economist of the World Bank. If we continue to allow unmitigated climate change, dealing with its... Read more

News Brief

December 5, 2006

Three longtime leaders in the green building field, Bill Browning, Bob Fox, and Rick Cook, have formed a partnership, Terrapin Bright Green, LLC, to provide clients with consulting, strategic planning, and policy services. While Fox and Cook will continue work with their existing firm (Cook + Fox Architects in New York City), they are working... Read more

News Brief

December 5, 2006

Green CommunitiesTM, a partnership between Enterprise Community Partners and the Natural Resources Defense Council (see

EBN

Vol. 14, No. 3), is now offering grants of up to $5,000 for affordable housing developers who wish to incorporate green planning charrettes into their design processes. The grants, designed to pay for... Read more

News Analysis

December 5, 2006

After several years of conversations about a rating system grounded in life-cycle assessment, with regional variations and smarter credits, the LEED® 3.0 development process was at risk of collapsing under the weight of expectations. In response, the U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC) chose to begin the process by getting all these... Read more

News Brief

December 5, 2006
Rob Watson, a leading advocate of green building, the primary framer of the LEED® Rating System, and a USGBC board member, has left the Natural Resources Defense Council after 21 years to create his own consulting firm, EcoTech International, Inc. (ETI) in New York City. ETI will help clients implement market transformation with green building in... Read more

News Brief

December 5, 2006
In an October ruling, the U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC) approved hard-surface flooring certified by the FloorScoreTM program (see

EBN

Vol. 14, No. 10) as an alternate path to achieve a credit for low-emitting carpets in the LEED® Rating System. As originally written, credit EQ 4.3, “Low-Emitting Materials: Carpet Systems,”... Read more