BuildingGreen Report

Blog Post

September 22, 2008
Plant engineer Henrik Mattsson showing off the chip sorting facility at the Brattleboro CHP plant.

Last week, I addressed some of the benefits of capturing waste heat from power plants and distributing it to buildings--a technology referred to as combined heat and power or CHP. This week we'll look at how this idea could be implemented in... Read more

Blog Post

September 21, 2008
Better version: ww.miniature-earth.com

Blog Post

September 18, 2008
Louis Palmer and the Solartaxi Since leaving Switzerland in the beginning of July in 2007, Louis Palmer has driven his solar-powered, three-wheeled, two-seater car around the world. Yesterday morning — a few days after giving a lift to the UN Secretary General in New York City (who afterward said "I hope I can enjoy another ride") — the Solartaxi... Read more

Blog Post

September 17, 2008

Twice each month, BuildingGreen publishes an email news bulletin with current news and product information briefs. Sign up here — it's free. We will never share or sell your email address, and you may unsubscribe at any time.

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Blog Post

September 17, 2008
Does prefabrication make green houses more affordable? I asked this question almost a year ago when I was working on a feature article on the topic. Back then the answer was "not quite yet." A year later, the answer still seems to be "not quite yet," at least according to Chad Ludeman, developer of the 100K house in Phildelphia, in an article on... Read more

News Analysis

September 16, 2008

 

Bamboo flooring is typically made by slicing bamboo poles into strips. These are destarched by boiling, glued into boards, and milled. Preservative treatment—often boric acid, though more harmful chemicals may be used—is applied during this process. Most bamboo flooring uses a urea-formaldehyde (UF) adhesive in the lamination process... Read more

Blog Post

September 14, 2008
The reactor at the Vermont Yankee nuclear power plant in Vernon, Vermont.

The majority of our electricity in the United States is generated by using a heat source to boil water and produce high-pressure steam, which then spins a steam turbine hooked up to a generator. To generate this steam, our utility companies burn fossil fuels like coal... Read more

Blog Post

September 9, 2008
Plastics — chemical compounds which are compressed under heat into desired shapes, and thereafter are not subject to corrosion — are increasingly in use. Some are made of coal-tar products, some of milk; and one... utilizes the Chinese soy bean. This useful plant, is, next to rice, the staff of life in the Celestial republic; like beans, peas, and... Read more

Blog Post

September 8, 2008
> A $250/cord of firewood burned in an EPA-compliant wood stove (70% efficient) provides just $16.23 per million Btu of delivered heat.

While energy prices have dropped from their record highs a few months ago, many area residents are still wondering how they'll pay for heat this winter. The most common fuel in northern New England,... Read more

Blog Post

September 8, 2008

Today the Department of Energy's Building Technologies Program launched the Zero Energy Buildings Database with an offering of three Zero Energy Buildings (ZEBs) and one near-ZEB. A lot of work has been put into defining ZEBs and you can learn about the different types at the Net ZEB page. Also make sure to look at the overview page for each... Read more

Blog Post

September 5, 2008

Twice each month, BuildingGreen publishes an email news bulletin with current news and product information briefs. Sign up here — it's free. We will never share or sell your email address, and you may unsubscribe at any time.

Read the current bulletin

Blog Post

September 2, 2008

Maverick NYC mechanical systems designer Henry Gifford has long been a critic of LEED, arguing that it encourages the wrong things, and doesn't go far enough to ensure that certified buildings really save energy or provide good air quality. I have great respect for Gifford and the work he does to design and commission low-energy buildings with... Read more

Blog Post

September 2, 2008
I was down in Orlando last week — land of asphalt, ChemLawns, and Mickey Mouse. As is typical in that part of the world, it was too hot outside and too cold inside. In one of the mammoth Disney hotels, I was participating for two days in the Tenth Anniversary Annual Meeting of an organization called FLASH. FLASH is the Federal Alliance for Safe... Read more

Blog Post

September 1, 2008
Rigid boardstock insulation.

In this final installment about insulation we'll take a look at the family of rigid boardstock materials. Unlike fiberous or spray-foam insulation that is installed in wall or ceiling cavities between the studs, rafters, or joists, boardstock insulation is applied either on the interior or exterior surface,... Read more

Blog Post

August 28, 2008
"Water shortages are expected to become more and more common in the coming decades. A 2003 report by the U.S. General Accounting Office reported that 36 states are likely to experience water shortages by 2013." "Water use in and around buildings, from both public water supplies and well water, accounts for about 47 billion gallons (180 billion l... Read more

Blog Post

August 28, 2008
Greg Kats of the venture capital firm Good Energies has argued for a while now that a company's carbon emissions can have a material impact on its financial performance, and by failing to disclose that risk the company may be liable to shareholder action. That argument was used to explain part of the appeal to corporations of green (low-carbon-... Read more

News Brief

August 28, 2008
Practice Greenhealth, a new nonprofit organization, hopes to shake up America’s healthcare industry. “We’re here to help the healthcare community develop sustainable systems,” according to communications director Eileen Secrest. “Its environmental footprint is huge, and we can make a difference.”

The organization is largely an expanded version... Read more

News Analysis

August 28, 2008
Update 9/5/08:

The response from EPA's Alex Baker, which was not available when this article was first published, has been added.

As the government’s lead agency promoting commercialization of solid-state lighting, including light-emitting diodes (LEDs), the U.S. Department of Energy in 2007 published its Energy Star standards for LED... Read more

News Brief

August 28, 2008

Washington, D.C., was among the early cities to require privately owned buildings to meet LEED standards (see EBN

Vol. 15, No. 12). Now, it is requiring the city government as well as private building owners to benchmark their buildings using the Energy Star Portfolio Manager tool and to submit performance data to the City, which will... Read more

Op-Ed

August 28, 2008
In late July, sustainable design directors and coordinators from 46 architecture and design firms gathered in Colorado Springs to compare notes and share best practices. Meredith Elbaum, AIA, of Sasaki Associates in Boston and Nellie Reid from Gensler’s Los Angeles office spearheaded the event after they realized that: (1) they have both been... Read more