BuildingGreen Report

News Brief

August 1, 2004

The

U.S. Green Building Council and

Meeting Strategies Worldwide were awarded the

Environmentally Responsible Meetings Award from the International Hotels Environment Initiative for their work to limit the environmental impact of Greenbuild 2003. This award is the highest honor for environmental responsibility among... Read more

News Brief

August 1, 2004

Rhode Island Governor Donald Carcieri signed “An Act Relating to Public Utilities and Carriers—Renewable Energy Standard” on June 30, 2004, requiring each of the state’s

electric utilities to provide 3% green power in 2007. The renewable energy requirement, which can come from solar, wind, ocean, geothermal, and certain hydropower and... Read more

Op-Ed

August 1, 2004
BuildingGreen has been selected by Architects/Designers/Planners for Social Responsibility (ADPSR) to receive the 2004 Lewis Mumford Award for Environment. ADPSR instituted the Mumford awards in 1992 “to honor people and organizations that exemplify the ADPSR goals of peace, preservation of the natural and built environment, and socially... Read more

News Analysis

August 1, 2004

A new report by Lisa Fay Matthiessen and Peter Morris of Davis Langdon Adamson (DLA) offers compelling evidence that if there is any premium associated with building green, it is far less significant than a range of other factors that affect building cost. The paper, “Costing Green: A Comprehensive Cost Database and Budgeting Methodology,”... Read more

News Brief

August 1, 2004
Lighting for Tomorrow, a

national lighting fixture design competition, has announced the winners in its first competition.

Stephen Blackman, director of design and product development at American Fluorescent Corporation, won the $10,000 grand prize for his chandelier design, Salem, which should be commercially available in July 2004.... Read more

News Brief

August 1, 2004

Debbi Allen of Portland, Oregon, a long-time proponent of responsible construction waste management and other green building practices in the Pacific Northwest, has died of complications from cancer. According to Kathleen O’Brien of O’Brien & Company, Bainbridge Island, Washington, “Debbi was always hopeful and especially good-hearted... Read more

News Brief

August 1, 2004
The New York City Department of Environmental Protection and U.S. EPA Region 2 have announced the winners of the

first Green Building Design Competition for New York City. The competition was open to actual and theoretical projects designed for any specific site within the five boroughs of New York City. Winners were selected from more than 50... Read more

News Analysis

August 1, 2004

On July 8, 2004 the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) announced that it is taking an “administrative action” against DuPont for withholding information the company had as far back as 1981 about risks from its use and disposal of perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA—also referred to as C8) at its Washington Works factory in Washington, West... Read more

News Brief

August 1, 2004

As part of its recently adopted

Green Building Strategy, the Vancouver, British Columbia city council approved a requirement that every new civic building larger than 500 m2 (5,000 ft2) achieve a Gold rating in the recently released LEED for British Columbia (see

EBN

Vol. 13, No. 5).

Feature

August 1, 2004
The year 2004 may well be remembered in the elevator industry as a watershed year. After six years during which Kone fought alone to gain acceptance for high-efficiency machines located within the hoistway (see

EBN

Vol. 8, No. 7), now all the major manufacturers are on board. For low-rise applications, these machine-room-less elevators... Read more

News Analysis

August 1, 2004

The European Union’s risk assessment of the deca form of polybrominated diphenyl ether (PBDE) was released on May 28, 2004, concluding that there is no reason to restrict use of the flame retardant. Nearly ten years in the making, this risk assessment came as a great relief to the chemical industry, which has been faced with rising concerns... Read more

Product Review

August 1, 2004
At the June 2004 NeoCon tradeshow in Chicago, C&A Floorcovering, Inc. announced the availability of a new cushion backing option, made from recycled polyvinyl butyral (PVB), for all its carpet products. Spurred by a demand from Kaiser Permanente, the nation’s largest health maintenance organization, C&A developed the new Ethos™ backing as... Read more

News Analysis

August 1, 2004

Steelcase, Inc. has announced its Environmental Partnership Program, enabling companies to resell, refurbish, donate, or recycle used Steelcase office products through a network of recyclers, resellers, and nonprofit organizations. “Today, many companies are not sure what to do with their furniture when it reaches the end of its useful life to... Read more

News Brief

August 1, 2004

On July 15, 2004 the California Department of Health Services (DHS) released its “

Standard Practice for the Testing of Volatile Organic Emissions from Various Sources Using Small-Scale Environmental Chambers.” This practice document supersedes the small-scale environmental chamber testing portion of California Specification 01350 and... Read more

News Analysis

August 1, 2004
In late August 2004, six

tidal turbines in New York City’s East River will begin cranking out about 150 kilowatts (kW) of electricity. If all goes as planned, a tidal power farm of 200 to 300 of the 15-foot-tall (4.5 m) turbines will be installed, beginning in the fall of 2005. These will produce about 10 megawatts (MW) of power by 2006, enough... Read more

Op-Ed

August 1, 2004

I found your recent feature article on flame retardants [

Vol. 13, No. 6] to be very enlightening. You have written it with your usual thoroughness. That’s why I subscribe to

EBN and why I tell my students to subscribe. I find so much of what you report to be valuable for clients and students.

[Sometimes] I assess houses... Read more

News Analysis

August 1, 2004

At the June 2004 NeoCon tradeshow in Chicago, Shaw Industries, Inc. announced that it is phasing out its PVC-backed carpet tile. “At the end of the year, we will be exiting PVC entirely,” announced Steve Bradfield, Shaw’s corporate director of environmental affairs. “We’re not leaving PVC because we think it’s a terrible material,” Bradfield... Read more

News Brief

August 1, 2004

“The competition goal is simple,” explains the

Green Dollhouse Web site: “Inspire lots of people (big and little) to take steps to make their own homes a little healthier and easier on the environment.” Design professionals and students are encouraged to design and build their own dollhouses for this competition, which was dreamed up by... Read more

News Brief

August 1, 2004

In order to recognize the role design professionals play in determining the energy efficiency of buildings, the U.S. Department of Energy and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency have begun

awarding the Energy Star

® label to commercial building designs. “A building design will be eligible for the new designation if the... Read more

News Analysis

August 1, 2004
Chicago Mayor Richard Daley announced in June that all new public buildings will be designed and built according to the Chicago Standard, a new set of guidelines derived from the U.S. Green Building Council’s LEED

® Rating System. The Chicago Standard is intended not to replace LEED but to help designers make the easiest and most effective use... Read more