BuildingGreen Report

News Brief

May 3, 2006
by Bruce King, P.E. 2005, Green Building Press. San Rafael, California. Paperback, 52 pages, $20.

Using coal flyash to replace 50% or more of the portland cement in concrete mixes is a huge opportunity for designers and builders—a way to get better concrete with a significantly smaller ecological footprint (see

EBN

Vol. 8, No. 6... Read more

News Brief

May 3, 2006

Although the U.S. used slightly (0.5%) less petroleum in 2005 than it did in record-breaking 2004, the percentage of that petroleum that was imported reached a new high in 2005, according to the U.S. Department of Energy’s Energy Information Administration. Of the 99.84 quadrillion Btus used, a net 59.8% was imported. Of those imports, 17.0%... Read more

News Brief

May 3, 2006

Thanks to a $380,000 grant from the Home Depot Foundation, the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) plans to develop a Controlled Wood Global Risk Registry. This program addresses one of the more challenging aspects of FSC’s recently revised chain-of-custody labeling rules—a requirement that any noncertified wood in a labeled product be “controlled... Read more

News Brief

May 3, 2006

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has ordered James Pflueger to pay $7.5 million for construction activities on 380 acres (150 ha) of coastal property on Kaua’i, Hawaii. Pflueger’s transgressions include cutting away a hillside to create a vertical road cut, grading a coastal plateau, creating new access roads to the coast, and... Read more

News Brief

May 3, 2006
The American Institute of Architects (AIA) Committee on the Environment has selected this year’s Top Ten Green Projects. The 2006 jury included Kevin Burke, AIA, of William McDonough + Partners; David Miller, FAIA, of the Miller Hull Partnership, LLP; Kath Williams, Ph.D., of Kath Williams + Associates; Kevin Hydes, P.E., of Stantec Consulting,... Read more

Feature

How to design and construct buildings to maintain livable conditions in the event of extended power outages or loss of heating fuel or water.

May 3, 2006

In December 2005 an editorial in Environmental Building News introduced the concept of “passive survivability,” or a building’s ability to maintain critical life-support conditions if services such as power, heating fuel, or water are lost, and suggested that it should become a standard design criterion for houses, apartment buildings, schools... Read more

News Brief

April 3, 2006
The National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) announced the 2006 winners of its annual National Green Building Awards during its Green Building Conference in Albuquerque, New Mexico. “As consumers show greater interest in homes that employ energy efficiency, resource conservation, and sustainable building, these experts help expand green... Read more

News Brief

April 3, 2006

The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) has approved tighter standards for dishwashers that carry the Energy Star® label. The new standard, which requires Energy Star dishwashers to be 41% more efficient than minimum federal standards, will take effect January 1, 2007. Current standards require Energy Star dishwashers to be 25% more efficient than... Read more

Op-Ed

April 3, 2006

When I received this month’s issue of

EBN [Vol. 15, No. 2], with its feature article extolling the virtues of polished concrete floors, I did a double take. Although I am drawn to concrete as a “modernist’s” material of choice, I believe it is of questionable value as an environmentally friendly choice.

It is difficult to... Read more

Product Review

April 3, 2006
Environmental Building News has long touted the environmental benefits of electric hand dryers compared to paper towels in commercial restrooms. Our 2002 review of the XLerator® hand dryer from Excel Dryer, Inc. (see

EBN

Vol. 11, No. 1) and our recognition of that product as a 2002 Top-10 Green Building Product helped draw the green... Read more

News Brief

April 3, 2006

A study sponsored by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has found no safe level of ground-level ozone, a component of smog linked to respiratory problems. The study, carried out by researchers at Yale and Johns Hopkins universities and published by

Environmental Health... Read more

News Analysis

April 3, 2006

Recognizing the role of construction in the global economy and planetary ecology, in February 2006 the United Nations Environment Program (UNEP) launched the Sustainable Building and Construction Initiative (SBCI). Part of UNEP’s Division of Technology, Industry, and Economics (DTIE), SBCI will establish global baselines for green building,... Read more

News Brief

April 3, 2006

Global Green USA, the U.S. affiliate of Green Cross International, has awarded two of its annual Millennium Awards to green building champions: William McDonough, FAIA, founding principal of William McDonough+Partners and cofounder of McDonough Braungart Design Chemistry, and Thomas C. Leppert, chair and CEO of Turner Construction. Also... Read more

News Brief

April 3, 2006

A Rhode Island court found Sherwin Williams Co., Millennium Holdings, and NL Industries liable in February 2006 for creating a public nuisance by making lead-based paint before it was banned in 1978. Although the judge dismissed punitive damage claims, the jury ordered the companies to abate lead-based paint on an estimated 240,000 Rhode Island... Read more

News Brief

April 3, 2006
The Lewis and Clark State Office Building, home to the Missouri Department of Natural Resources, achieved 53 points in the U.S. Green Building Council’s LEED® for New Construction Rating System, earning a Platinum rating. Located in Jefferson City, Missouri, the 120,000 ft2 (11,148 m2) building restores the former site of a state surplus property... Read more

News Brief

April 3, 2006

The Building and Social Housing Foundation (BSHF) is inviting applications to its 21st World Habitat Awards, designed to recognize “practical, innovative, and sustainable solutions to current housing issues faced by countries of the global South as well as the North,” according to BSHF. “Projects are sought that view the term ‘habitat’ from a... Read more

News Brief

April 3, 2006

The International Code Council (ICC) has developed Coastal Construction Flood Plain Inspector certification, which indicates “knowledge of general construction provisions, special high wind and load path continuity, special flood hazard areas, detached and accessory structures, and governmental regulations.” Certified individuals will be able... Read more

News Brief

April 3, 2006
by Erik Reece. Riverhead Books, New York City, 2006. Hardcover, 251 pages, $24.95.

“You can think of any mountain in Appalachia as a geological layer cake with seams of coal two to 15 feet thick, separated by much thicker bands of sandstone, slate, and shale,” explains Erik Reece in

Lost Mountain, which describes mountaintop-removal... Read more

News Brief

April 3, 2006
The National Building Museum in Washington, D.C., will open “The Green House: New Directions in Sustainable Architecture and Design” on May 20, 2006. The exhibition will feature descriptions of 22 homes from around the world, a full-size green home, and a resource room with building-material information, including a kiosk featuring our

... Read more

News Brief

April 3, 2006

New Mexico has become the first state in the U.S. to join the Chicago Climate Exchange (CCX), the nation’s only market-based cap-and-trade system designed to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. The state hopes to reduce its emissions to 2000 levels by 2012, 10% below 2000 levels by 2020, and 75% below 2000 levels by 2050. CCX membership is legally... Read more