BuildingGreen Report

News Brief

August 29, 2006

Building owners or leaseholders can deduct the cost of energy-efficient property installed in commercial buildings, and recent guidance issued by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) describes what taxpayers need to do to qualify. Qualifying for the deduction, enacted in the Energy Policy Act of 2005, and currently set to expire at the end of... Read more

News Analysis

Equal recognition making waves across the Atlantic

August 29, 2006

The Building Research Establishment’s (BRE) EcoHomes environmental rating system for homes in Great Britain recently gave equal weight in its procurement guidelines to wood certified by the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) and by the Sustainable Forests Initiative (SFI). The move is making waves across the Atlantic because FSC, an international... Read more

News Brief

July 31, 2006
New York Institute of Technology’s (NYIT) entry in the 2005 Solar Decathlon found a permanent home in June 2006 at the U.S. Merchant Marine Academy (USMMA) in Kings Point, New York. The NYIT team, which was the only team in the 2005 competition to use a hydrogen fuel cell for power, has dubbed the 800 ft2 (74 m2) house America’s first solar-... Read more

News Brief

July 31, 2006

Exposure to air pollution before birth can cause developmental delay in children, according to a study performed by Columbia University’s Center for Children’s Environmental Health and published by

Environmental Health Perspectives in April 2006. The study measured the exposure of pregnant women living in the Washington Heights, Central... Read more

News Analysis

July 31, 2006
Perfluorooctanoic acid, better known as PFOA or C8, has appeared in blood samples in polar bears, pregnant women across the U.S., and Chinese villagers. It is extremely resistant to breakdown, it is bioaccumulative, and an advisory panel to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has called it a “likely carcinogen” (see

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Vol.... Read more

News Brief

July 31, 2006
by Peter Jeswald. Storey Publishing, North Adams, Massachusetts, 2005. Softcover, 248 pages, $19.95.

This clear, practical, how-to book provides a treasure trove of ideas for creating pathways, stairways, and footbridges in the outdoor landscape. While the specific focus on green is relatively minor, the vast majority of solutions described... Read more

News Brief

July 31, 2006
Virginia Avenue Park in Santa Monica, California, recently earned a Silver rating in the U.S. Green Building Council’s LEED® for New Construction rating system, becoming the first park in North America to achieve LEED certification. The park, which opened in November 2005, was designed by Koning Eizenberg Architecture in Santa Monica and Spurlock... Read more

News Analysis

July 31, 2006

Originally designed, manufactured, and marketed 20 years ago, the Mister Miser urinal (see

EBN

Vol. 6, No. 8) has been reintroduced. According to Rocco Corbino of Mister Miser, LLC, the product’s first incarnation—designed, manufactured, and marketed by his business partner’s father—was in some ways a victim of its own success... Read more

News Brief

July 31, 2006

The Clackamas Community Land Trust, based in Clackamas, Oregon, has issued a call for entries to its 2006 green-built dollhouse competition and show, which will take place September 25 through October 5, 2006, in Portland, Oregon. A fundraiser for the land trust, the competition offers separate categories for architecture professionals, design... Read more

News Brief

July 31, 2006

The U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC) has added the following members to its Core Research Committee: Gail Brager, Ph.D., professor and associate director of the Center for the Built Environment at the University of California, Berkeley; Drury Crawley, AIA, technology development manager at the U.S. Department of Energy; John Fernandez, AIA,... Read more

News Brief

July 31, 2006
The nonprofit SustainLane.com has named Portland, Oregon, the most sustainable of the 50 largest cities in the U.S. Second and third went to San Francisco and Seattle, respectively, while Columbus, Ohio, was named least sustainable. The rankings were based on 13 factors: air quality, housing affordability, innovation, knowledge base and... Read more

Product Review

July 31, 2006
Calling for a change from “turbine on a stick” wind generation equipment, which is unsuitable for most urban environments, AeroVironment, Inc., is introducing a new approach to small-scale wind generation that might best be described as turbines on the parapet. Founded by Paul MacCready, Ph.D., AeroVironment, based in Monrovia, California, has a... Read more

News Brief

July 31, 2006

In June 2006, the San Francisco Board of Supervisors enacted the nation’s first ban on some products containing bisphenol-A (BPA), used to make the hard plastic polycarbonate as well as most epoxies. BPA, an endocrine disrupter, has been linked to a range of health effects—most recently prostate cancer (see

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Vol. 15, No. 7).... Read more

News Brief

July 31, 2006
edited by Timothy G. Townsend and Helena Solo-Gabriele. CRC Press, Boca Raton, Florida, 2006. Hardcover, 501 pages, $139.95.

With greater awareness of environmental safety and health following the Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA’s) ban on most lumber treated with chromated copper arsenate (CCA), consumers, builders and architects... Read more

News Brief

July 31, 2006

E Source, a subscription-based information provider focusing on energy efficiency and utility demand-side management, has been purchased from the McGraw-Hill Companies by a group of E Source managers, including Michael Shepard, one of the original founders. E Source Companies, LLC, with about 45 employees, remains located in Boulder, Colorado.... Read more

News Brief

July 31, 2006
The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) awarded a grant to the American Horticultural Society (AHS) to update the map of plant hardiness zones, reflecting the average annual low temperatures across the country. More than three years after AHS completed the revised map, however, USDA has yet to publish it. The map is based on 16 years of data (... Read more

News Analysis

July 31, 2006
The National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) Research Center, Inc., is pursuing accreditation of its Model Green Home Building Guidelines from the American National Standards Institute (ANSI). The decision came following a unanimous recommendation from NAHB’s Green Building Subcommittee and a vote by the Construction Codes and Standards... Read more

News Brief

July 31, 2006
The Holcim Foundation for Sustainable Construction—supported by Holcim, Ltd., one of the world’s largest suppliers of cement, aggregates, concrete, and construction-related services—has announced the winners in the first Holcim Awards program, an international competition designed to recognize projects that “embody approaches to meet the present-... Read more

News Brief

July 31, 2006

The Chicago City Council established the Green Roof Improvement Fund in June 2006, which will encourage owners of existing downtown buildings to retrofit them with green roofs. The $500,000 fund will match the investments made by building owners, up to $100,000 per project. “With more green roofs than any other city in the United States,... Read more

Op-Ed

July 31, 2006

As Google™ has proven, the power of search engines on the Internet cannot be overestimated. We’re pleased to report that, having learned that lesson and using hardware and software from Google, we’ve now improved the search capability for our website at BuildingGreen.com and our

BuildingGreen Suite premium information service. Our new... Read more