BuildingGreen Report

Blog Post

January 22, 2008
There are a couple big-picture links I want to put right out front. You can come back to them later, but I want you to be aware of them in case they're not already on your radar. Energy Information Administration — Official Energy Statistics from the U.S. Government 2007 Buildings Energy Data Book OK. The Energy Star people have been putting... Read more

Blog Post

January 22, 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

January 21, 2008

In his book Your Green Home, Alex Wilson refers to radiant floors as "a great heating option for a poorly designed house." He goes on to explain that the heating requirements of an extremely well-insulated home with a properly airtight envelope, even in most cold climates, will most likely result in an overheated house if the radiant floor is... Read more

Blog Post

January 18, 2008
Some smart people on the greenbuilding email list (along with just about everyone else on the internet) have been discussing the Nano — at $2,500, the world's cheapest car — which is being introduced by Tata Motors in India, which apparently has visions of marketing it internationally. You can read the whole thread in the archives. Here are some... Read more

Blog Post

January 16, 2008
This interior features Plyboo bamboo flooring and cabinets made with Plyboo panels.

On the heels of the announcement of the market introduction of Smith & Fong's no-added-formaldehyde PlybooPure bamboo flooring and panel products in the current issue of Environmental Building News, Dan Smith of Smith & Fong — the makers of Plyboo... Read more

Blog Post

January 15, 2008
Innovation point for the Hearst Tower in New York: reduced steel in the structure. In the first few years of LEED, you could count the Platinum-rated buildings on one hand. Now it's hard to keep up with the announcements. There are several reasons for this evolution — more experienced project teams making better buildings, and more buildings... Read more

Blog Post

January 15, 2008

Notes from BuildingGreen's breakfast gathering at Greenbuild for partners and Sustainable Design Directors from forward-thinking firms around the U.S.

Overarching IssuesSeveral topics seemed to permeate the conversations among all of the breakfast attendees. Expanding the Reach of Green Design: Many attendees discussed how to get... Read more

Blog Post

January 14, 2008

Back on November 5, Nadav Malin posted here about "the imminent creation of the Green Building Certification Institute (GBCI)." The USGBC is now distributing the following press release:

LEED AP Credential Now Administered Through GBCI.org Over the last seven years, the LEED Professional Accreditation program has verified that more than... Read more

Blog Post

January 8, 2008

The folks who make Waterless No-Flush urinals (we've had one in our office since 1998) have been distributing the following quiz.

"Large areas of western United States and even parts of Canada are either in a drought or have received considerably less rainfall than normal. It has not yet been determined if this is simply a temporary... Read more

Blog Post

January 8, 2008

I'll be interviewed about GreenSpec and Green Building Products this evening on Santa Fe Public Radio, KSFR, at 7:10 p.m. (Eastern time), for 15 or 20 minutes. Tune in if you'd like — 101.1 FM if you're in New Mexico (pretty much anywhere between Taos and Albuquerque)... or streaming on the web (looks like you'll need Windows Media Player,... Read more

Blog Post

January 7, 2008
"There's one thing worse than being young and full of stormy tantrums, and that's being old and backward-looking and crotchety." So said Bruce Sterling (author, thinker, critic, doer) in this year's annual rollicking and roving discussion of the state of the world at The Well — the still-kicking "Whole Earth 'Lectronic Link" founded by Stewart... Read more

Blog Post

January 7, 2008
The U.S. Green Building Council has announced its Greenbuild keynote speaker for 2008: Archbishop Desmond Tutu. It's an interesting choice, following on the heels of Vice President Al Gore being given half of the Nobel Prize for peace, that reinforces the connection between social justice and environmental performance. What will Tutu have to say... Read more

Blog Post

January 4, 2008
I mentioned this in passing the other day, but it deserves to be given more attention. Following up on its February 2007 webcast, "The 2010 Imperative Global Emergency Teach-in" that reached an audience of a quarter-million to illuminate the role of building design education in global warming, Architecture 2030 — the non-profit research... Read more

Blog Post

January 4, 2008
An interesting conversation about what lies beyond LEED has been happening over the last few days on the Big Green email list. Some excerpts of the exchange follow. (I've done some editing, and added links. Check the December '07 and January '08 Big Green archives for the complete, unedited exchange.) We have a project where the client is asking... Read more

Blog Post

January 3, 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

January 2, 2008
The GreenSpec team is regularly contacted by manufacturers and their marketers asking how to get products "certified as green." The question itself reveals one of two things: that they either haven't done any work yet to understand what it is they're actually asking... or that they have. In the first case, good on 'em for looking into it. (... Read more

Feature

The number of environmental product standards and certifications is growing rapidly, putting numerous different "green" logos on products. But which ones can you trust?

January 2, 2008

The more self-evident a product’s attributes are, the less they need to be verified with certification. Lumber doesn’t need certification of its wood content, for example, but certification is helpful for distinguishing forest products that were sustainably harvested in responsibly managed forests, since their origin... Read more

News Brief

January 1, 2008

Since January 2007, government agency Natural Resources Canada (NRCan) has been offering EcoEnergy retrofit grants to owners of single-family homes, including detached, semidetached, and low-rise multifamily buildings. As of October 2007, the program had performed 37,000 energy evaluations and awarded 2,200 grants to homeowners, covering... Read more

News Analysis

January 1, 2008
In the average U.S. supermarket, condensers in the back of the store running the centralized refrigeration system require 4,000 pounds (1,800 kg) of HCFC-22, the common refrigerant used to charge the systems. Pipes carry the refrigerant to the various refrigerated cases throughout the store, but 20%–25% of the refrigerant leaks out annually,... Read more

News Brief

January 1, 2008

According to a study performed by the Freedonia Group, a market research firm, ground-source and air-source heat pumps are gaining market share relative to warm-air furnaces. In terms of value, heat pumps accounted for the largest share of heating equipment shipments in 2006, representing 43% of shipments; when measured by volume, however, the... Read more