Op-Ed
Architects/Designers/Planners for Social Responsibility (ADPSR) has been a long-term supporter of
Environmental Building News (EBN) but was disappointed in your story on Wal-Mart’s environmental progress [Vol. 15, No. 1]. The article fails to examine the full breadth of the deleterious impact the company has on our country. You argue... Read more
News Brief
News Analysis
As early as 2007, there may be a new minimum standard for green buildings. The American Society of Heating, Refrigerating, and Air-Conditioning Engineers, Inc. (ASHRAE), U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC), and Illuminating Engineering Society of North America (IESNA) announced in February 2006 that they will cosponsor the development of ASHRAE... Read more
News Brief
New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson signed an executive order in January 2006 requiring all executive branch state agencies, including the Higher Education Department, to adopt the U.S. Green Building Council’s LEED® Rating System. New buildings 15,000 ft2 (1,400 m2) or larger and those with over 50 kW of peak electricity demand are required to... Read more
News Brief
New York City’s Skyscraper Museum will be showing the exhibit “Green Towers for New York: From Visionary to Vernacular,” featuring the city’s existing green high-rises as well as some in design and construction, through May 2006. The Museum is online at www.skyscraper.org.
News Brief
The Emerging Green Builders chapter of the U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC) is encouraging entries to its annual Natural Talent Design Competition. This year’s competition will be administered through USGBC’s regional chapters. “This is an exciting change,” says Joe Snider, chair of the Emerging Green Builders Committee. “Contest entrants... Read more
News Analysis
News Brief
Ecotone Publishing, LLC, based in Kansas City, Missouri, announced in February 2006 that it will offset all carbon dioxide emissions related to its business operations. Ecotone, which publishes books about green design and construction, purchased 50 tons (45 tonnes) of carbon offsets to cover emissions caused by its travel, waste production,... Read more
News Brief
California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger’s administration launched the Green California website, www.green.ca.gov, in February 2006. Rosario Marin, secretary of the State and Consumer Services Agency, hopes the site will become “the primary ’go-to’ site—the new, centralized, electronic reference library—for engineers, architects, building... Read more
Product Review
Most scratch-removal systems use a series of increasingly fine-grit abrasives to grind... Read more
News Analysis
Following its acquisition of Bonded Insulation in July 2005 (see
EBN Vol. 14, No. 11), U.S. GreenFiber, LLC, based in Charlotte, North Carolina, has expanded further by acquiring two additional cellulose insulation companies: Blue Sky Manufacturing, Inc., based in East St. Louis, Illinois, and Redi-Therm Insulation, Inc., based in Salt... Read more
News Brief
Whole Foods Market, Inc., a Fortune 500 company based in Austin, Texas, has purchased more than 458,000 megawatt-hours of wind energy credits to offset all of the electricity used in its stores, facilities, bake houses, distribution centers, regional offices and national headquarters in the U.S. and Canada. The two-year contract with Renewable... Read more
News Brief
The Geography of Nowhere and
Home From Nowhere take a scathing look at suburbia,... Read more
News Brief
Downtown populations in the U.S. grew 10% in the 1990s, according to a Brookings Institution report, following 20 years of overall decline. The study, “Who Lives Downtown,” presents findings related to downtown population, household, and income trends in 44 cities from 1970 to 2000. The study is online at www.brookings.edu (search for “... Read more
News Brief
In January 2006, New York City’s New School opened the Tishman Environment and Design Center, which will offer an undergraduate program in environmental studies. “One of the distinguishing characteristics of the Center will be the critical role of design,” says Joel Towers, former director of sustainable design at the Parsons School of Design... Read more
Op-Ed
The argument is really fairly simple. Fossil fuel supplies are limited. World oil production will soon peak—if it has not already—beginning an inexorable decline in output and increase in cost. The same goes for natural gas, though its transition from plenitude to shortage may be even more abrupt.
The best way to extend the availability... Read more
News Brief
The U.S. General Services Administration (GSA) has given Evergreen Awards to Watson Furniture Group, based in Poulsbo, Washington, and Shaw Industries, based in Dalton, Georgia, in recognition of their efforts in recycling, reducing waste, and offering environmentally preferable products and services. GSA recognized Watson in the furniture... Read more
News Brief
New federal efficiency standards for residential central air conditioners took effect in January 2006. President Clinton set the 30% jump in efficiency, from SEER 10 to SEER 13; President Bush challenged the move but was overruled by the Second Circuit Court of Appeals in a lawsuit brought by the Natural Resources Defense Council (see
... Read more
News Brief
Conservation International (CI) and George Washington University (GWU) are collaborating in the development and implementation of the Ecotourism Learning Program, designed to “provide a set of tools, knowledge, and standards to help communities create ecotourism destinations that successfully attract tourists while protecting the natural... Read more
News Brief
The International Interior Design Association (IIDA) is now accepting entries for its first annual Smart Environments Awards, intended to “honor the best in design solutions over the past five years, those that are environmentally and socially responsible as well as beautiful and functional.” Cosponsored by
Metropolis magazine, the... Read more

