BuildingGreen Report

Blog Post

May 16, 2008
"Using case studies of recent high performance architecture, this session will identify key strategies required to increase sustainable methods to achieve zero carbon goals by the year 2030. The case studies examine design strategies and processes for the next generation of sustainable architecture, going beyond current best practices through... Read more

Blog Post

May 16, 2008

Sunlight gives us light at no charge, which we can harness in our buildings to reduce our reliance on electrical lighting, while providing a more enjoyable indoor environment. Leave it to an engineer to tell us how much that sunlight actually costs us. Lumens per watt (lpw) is the measure of lighting efficacy, telling us how much light (lumens... Read more

Blog Post

May 16, 2008
An unexpected tower in the hallway... A foundation of the Society for Design Administration (SDA), Canstruction is a design/build competition currently held in cities throughout North America. Teams of architects, engineers, and students mentored by these professionals, compete to design and build giant structures made entirely from full cans... Read more

Blog Post

May 16, 2008

"I kinda liked the expo this year. There seemed to be a lot of stuff." —a guy to another guy

A piece of it. Just a piece.

Blog Post

May 15, 2008
This morning began (for me) with a 7:00 (early!) session called "Legally Green: Legal and Practice Issues of LEED," presented by Betsy del Monte and William Quatman. The room had a capacity approaching 400, and got close to filling up. Betsy's presentation was, for the most part, understandably basic. The big majority of the audience, by show of... Read more

Blog Post

May 15, 2008
Nadav Malin and Scot Horst offered up a great, head-twisting presentation about product certifications called "It's Certified Green But What Does That Mean?" to about 500 people. It covered all the territory in the EBN feature "Behind the Logos: Understanding Green Product Certifications" and more. There may have been some misunderstanding on the... Read more

Blog Post

May 15, 2008
I came to Boston yesterday, giving myself plenty of time to check in at the sprawling Boston Convention and Exhibition Center (BCEC) for this year's AIA National Convention before heading out — pretty much cluelessly — to get a closer look at this historic city. I'd been tipped off that the Freedom Trail, a walking tour following a thin red line... Read more

Blog Post

May 15, 2008
I'm no fan of vinyl, but someone (actually a lot of someones) keep buying lots of it, year after year. Why? A recent article, "Vinyl makers push for New Urbanism market," in New Urban News looks at the benefits. Since vinyl is pretty much Evil (I picture it as the smoldering stuff in the toaster oven in "Time Bandits") in the environmental world... Read more

Blog Post

May 15, 2008

Now, having made that snarky comment about white guys in a previous post (for the record, I'm a white guy), I should say that the conference itself has a very nicely diverse attendance. Walking the trade show floor, you're surrounded by a range of ages, what seems like an almost even mix of sexes, and a good variety of ancestries. And not... Read more

Blog Post

May 12, 2008
(click images to expand) Jerelyn and Alex Wilson of BuildingGreen What kind of truck doesn't use any gasoline or diesel fuel to move heavy materials around the city? A bicycle truck, of course. Back in March BuildingGreen was introduced to The New Amsterdam Project , a bicycle trucking firm in Cambridge, Ma. We tried them out moving our... Read more

Blog Post

May 7, 2008
The AIA 2008 National Convention and Design Exposition — "We the People" — starts next week Thursday, on the East Coast for the first time in almost a decade. As usual, BuildingGreen will be there. If you are, too, come see us at booth 14079. We also have people involved in a couple sessions. Peter Yost will co-lead an all-day preconvention... Read more

Blog Post

May 6, 2008
If I could adopt a conference, it would be the USGBC Cascadia chapter's Living Future 'Unconference'. As someone who generally prefers to stay behind the scenes talking shop, it was a delight to find myself surrounded primarily by the obsessed of the green building world. Even better, as presenters we were encouraged to bring our own big... Read more

Blog Post

May 6, 2008
As Research Director at BuildingGreen, I dabble in - or dive headlong into - a wide range of BuildingGreen internal and collaborative projects, and am part of the team working to make the GreenSpec product directory as robust as possible. I have every intention of making my bio personalized, but there are too many other fun things to do than talk... Read more

Blog Post

May 2, 2008

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Blog Post

April 30, 2008
"Green buildings have captured the imagination of many in the mainstream, but for green professionals the time has come to stop designing for mere energy efficiency and start designing to regenerate and restore. And that means taking responsibility for what people do in buildings and communities after they are built." — www.greenmanifesto.org... Read more

News Brief

April 29, 2008

Habitat for Humanity International has partnered with the Home Depot Foundation to create Partners in Sustainable Building, an initiative to encourage green building in affordable housing. The program will offer $30 million over five years to Habitat affiliates to offset the higher first costs of green building in up to 5,000 homes. According... Read more

Explainer

April 29, 2008
Everyone knows how cool (or cold!) it feels to have wet clothing on in a breeze. As water evaporates, it absorbs heat, leaving our skin feeling cooler. Similarly, cooling towers evaporate water to reject heat from chillers or industrial equipment.

Direct evaporative coolers (also called swamp coolers or desert coolers) use the same principle to... Read more

Product Review

April 29, 2008
Evaporative cooling lowers indoor-air temperatures without the high energy loads of conventional cooling (see page 20). But to get those lower temperatures, direct evaporative coolers have to pull sensible heat out of the air by adding water vapor (latent heat), or sacrifice efficiency with an indirect system mediated by a heat exchanger. A... Read more

News Brief

April 29, 2008

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has announced new lead paint rules for contractors who renovate or repair housing, child-care facilities, or schools built before 1978. The Toxic Substances Control Act of 1992 required EPA to regulate renovation activities by 1996, but EPA had delayed writing the rules until pressed by a 2005... Read more

News Analysis

April 29, 2008
Buildings that carry LEED or Energy Star certifications have higher occupancy rates and lease for more dollars per square foot than their peers, according to the CoStar Group, a company that provides information services to the commercial real estate industry. CoStar tapped into its database covering billions of square feet of commercial buildings... Read more