BuildingGreen Report

News Analysis

January 22, 2009

The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) has launched the EnergySmart Hospitals program, with the goal of reducing the energy use of hospitals by 20% in existing buildings and 30% in new buildings, relative to current standards. The program has similar goals to the Energy Star for Healthcare program administered by the U.S. Environmental Protection... Read more

News Brief

January 22, 2009

One of a handful of laws in the U.S. requiring private buildings to meet LEED standards, legislation passed in 2006 in Washington, D.C., may be unenforceable as currently written. According to the Washington Business Journal, the D.C. Department of Environment is working to address a complaint from the surety industry, which issues bonds that... Read more

Blog Post

January 21, 2009
The ULS Report ("Use Less Stuff") started off as a primitive bimonthly web publication in 1994. Five years on, in 1999, it decreased frequency to quarterly. There were two last-gasp issues in 2000, and then it was dormant for 8 years. In 2008, a new issue came out, followed by another for the first quarter of this year. Page 4 of that phoenix-... Read more

Blog Post

January 20, 2009
The Midcoast Green Collaborative is a Maine-based public nonprofit with the wide mission of socially responsible economic growth for their region. There's also an associated good blog with a high percentage of building-based posts — lots of nice, accessible, generally bite-sized, hands-on observational science. One swell example begins, "Do you... Read more

Blog Post

January 20, 2009
I've traveled outside of North America only once in my life, and that was to Ireland in 2002. That was the year they switched from the Irish Pound to the Euro, and it was when they put a tax on plastic bags. We dopey tourists didn't know anything about that plastic bag thing before we got there. The deal, in theory, was this: If you wanted a... Read more

Blog Post

January 19, 2009

In last week's column I examined a fairly unusual local power source: the Northfield Mountain pumped hydropower system, which is used for "storing" electricity--by pumping water uphill. This week we'll take a look at a very different power-generation system that's even closer to home: the landfill gas power plant at the Windham Solid... Read more

Blog Post

January 13, 2009

whir... whir... whir.. whir... CLUNK! It finally worked... after decades of catching nothing but birds and bats, while making a small amount of electricity as a byproduct, the international effort to catch a UFO netted its first victim. A wind turbine in England lost one of its rotors last week in a nighttime incident with no clear cause, on... Read more

Blog Post

January 12, 2009

Last weekend, looking for someplace new to explore, my wife and I drove down to Northfield, Massachusetts, to check out the cross-country ski center. The skiing was great, and it occurred to me that readers of this column might be interested in learning about the pumped-hydro power plant on the mountain--the ski center was created as... Read more

Blog Post

January 7, 2009

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Blog Post

January 5, 2009
CREE LR6 6" recessed downlight

Light-emitting diodes, better known as LEDs, are all around us--those little red or green indicator lights that blink at us from our stereo equipment, most new traffic signals, and virtually all new exit signs in commercial buildings. And if you've been to Times Square recently, you've seen way too many LEDs... Read more

News Brief

January 2, 2009
San Francisco company Recurrent Energy was founded on the powerful idea of leasing rooftop space to produce and sell solar power to the tenants inside (see

EBN

Vol. 17, No. 2). In its first year, the company has completed several large installations including a 1-MW system on the North Face distribution center in Visalia and a 412-kW... Read more

News Brief

January 2, 2009

A new database and analysis service collects information from users on facility costs and sustainability, and allows facility managers to compare their buildings to others using more than 30 data filters that ensure meaningful comparisons to similar buildings.

The tool, FM Benchmarking from FMLink and Facility Issues, uses cost data on... Read more

News Analysis

January 2, 2009
About 65,000 people have become LEED Accredited Professionals (LEED APs) since the program began in 2000 as a way to recognize experts in the U.S. Green Building Council’s (USGBC’s) LEED Rating System. In November 2008 at the Greenbuild conference, the Green Building Certification Institute (GBCI), the organization that administers the LEED AP... Read more

News Brief

January 2, 2009
Vanguard Homes, based in Cary, North Carolina, has built the first home in the nation to receive a WaterSense label from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. The home is part of Briar Chapel, a green community development in Chapel Hill, North Carolina.

One of several builders in the development, Vanguard chose to go above and beyond the... Read more

News Analysis

January 2, 2009

TimberSIL, the sodium-silicate-based “glass-wood fusion” alternative to preservative-treated lumber, has overcome some hurdles since we reviewed it in 2004 (see

EBN

Vol. 13, No. 10).

In 2006, a distribution agreement with one of the country’s largest building materials distributors fell apart due to process and quality... Read more

News Brief

January 2, 2009

As part of its management of the Clean Water Act, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has proposed national stormwater guidelines for construction sites. Under the proposed regulations, all construction sites would be required to implement erosion and sediment-control best practices. In addition, construction projects disturbing over... Read more

News Brief

January 2, 2009

A recent survey of 30,000 facility managers, designed and analyzed by Peter Kimmel, AIA, and funded by the online publication FMLink, found that an increasing number are engaged in energy auditing and re-commissioning. Their efforts resulted in an average 5%–10% energy savings from 2006 to 2008, with the most effective changes being inexpensive... Read more

News Brief

January 2, 2009

The dramatic energy savings reported for compact fluorescent lamps (CFLs) over conventional incandescents typically do not take into account the impact on space heating and cooling energy.

A study at the Canadian Centre for Housing Technology in Ottawa used two identical houses, both on fixed lighting schedules for their 31 lamps, but one... Read more

News Brief

January 2, 2009

The U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC) has announced that Rebecca Flora will replace Peter Templeton as its senior vice president of education and research.

Flora leaves her post as the executive director of the Green Building Alliance in Pittsburgh and ends her tenure as chair of the USGBC Board of Directors; she begins her new... Read more

News Analysis

January 2, 2009

Extending its mission of product safety from people to the environment, Underwriters Laboratories (UL) will offer manufacturers two new programs to test and certify environmental product claims. Set to launch in January 2009, the Environmental Claims Validation (ECV) program will test and assess environmental product claims, and a second... Read more