BuildingGreen Report

News Analysis

January 1, 1993
Some Help on Lead

from NAHB

With the upcoming release of its booklet

What Remodelers Need to Know and Do About Lead, the Remodelers Council of the National Association of Home Builders is providing a valuable service. The booklet, to judge by a late draft, will be effective in educating builders and remodelers about the dangers... Read more

Feature

January 1, 1993
We use approximately 3.8 billion board feet of preservative-treated lumber per year in the building industry in North America, and treated wood accounts for over 21% of all dollars spent on timber products (figures from the American Wood Preservers Institute—AWPI). What is the impact of these materials on the environment? Do they release harmful... Read more

News Analysis

January 1, 1993
Fiberglass Manufacturers Incorporate Recycled Glass

All three of the major fiberglass manufacturers are now using some amount of recycled glass in their insulation. Manville, which has been most active in promoting its use of recycled glass, claims a recycled content of approximately 30%, all of which is post-consumer recycled glass... Read more

Op-Ed

January 1, 1993
Dear Editor,

Hearing of the plight of the eagles battling with DDT as a child, the message really hit home recently after I lost a batch of home-brew to contamination with end-cut solution. I had been framing a deck all that week and applying liberal doses of the copper naphthenate-based solution via low-pressure sprayer. Normal hand... Read more

News Analysis

January 1, 1993
Faster CFC Phase-out

On November 25th, international delegates in Copenhagen, Denmark, completed negotiations on a second major revision to the Montreal Protocol for the phaseout of ozone-depleting substances. Under the Copenhagen Amendments, the schedule for eliminating CFCs is moved up to January 1, 1996, four years ahead of the schedule... Read more

News Brief

January 1, 1993
The Sourcebook for Sustainable Design.

Andrew St. John, Editor. Boston Society of Architects, 52 Broad St., Boston, MA 02109; 617/951-1433 x221, 617/951-0845 (fax), $25.

The Sourcebook for Sustainable Design is a true labor of love. It is the first attempt we know of at a comprehensive listing of products and materials that are useful,... Read more

Product Review

January 1, 1993
Borate Preservatives for

Non-exposed Wood

Boron has long been recognized as an effective and very safe pesticide in wood. In part, it effectiveness comes from its ability to diffuse freely throughout the wood, thus protecting even the center of large timbers, which are not affected by pressure treating. Unfortunately, the diffusability... Read more

News Analysis

January 1, 1993
Timber Summit

Representatives of the timber industry and environmental groups are hopeful that a Pacific Northwest timber summit, promised by Clinton during his campaign, will settle issues that have long polarized loggers and environmentalists in efforts to protect jobs and old-growth forests. The summit is expected in March or April.

... Read more

News Analysis

January 1, 1993
Reduced Pentane Emissions from EPS Production

While expanded polystyrene (EPS) is the only type of rigid foam insulation that is currently made with neither CFCs nor HCFCs, it has one environmental drawback: pentane emissions during manufacturing. EPS is produced by expanding styrene beads using pentane gas, a hydrocarbon that contributes to... Read more

Op-Ed

January 1, 1993
Dear Editor:

CoHousing development—is it sustainable? Kathleen O’Brien thought maybe; I think yes. Yes because CoHousing offers another scale of social organization—an intermediate scale between the single family and the town or municipality—thereby expanding the palette of technologies that can be applied. It does this simply by being a... Read more

News Analysis

January 1, 1993
National Energy Bill Mandates Greater Water Efficiency

The 1992 Energy Policy Act, signed into law in October, sets maximum water use standards for most plumbing products manufactured after January 1, 1994. Most toilets will be limited to 1.6 gallons per flush (a higher limit of 3.5 gpf will apply to most commercial toilets). Kitchen and... Read more

Feature

Steve reflects on his work and the field of environmentally sustainable building in this interview with Alex Wilson.

January 1, 1993

Steve Loken has been building houses and enjoying the Montana wilderness for fifteen years. In the mid-’80s, Steve began to see a conflict. The forests he so enjoyed were disappearing, the houses going up were getting bigger and bigger, and the lumber they had available to them was getting worse and worse. Out of that realization grew the idea... Read more

News Analysis

November 1, 1992
International Coordination of Sustainable Forestry Initiatives

As the plight of forests gets more attention, the number of groups and organizations that have taken on the task of certifying sustainable forestry practices has multiplied. With this proliferation, a need has emerged to coordinate the different certification efforts and establish... Read more

News Analysis

November 1, 1992
$3 Billion Energy & Water Conservation Retrofit

The Toronto City Council has just approved in principal a proposal to coordinate a massive energy and water conservation program. Viewed as a way to create jobs for the city’s ailing construction sector, the plan calls for investments averaging $14,000 per unit on 75% of the city’s 280,000... Read more

News Brief

November 1, 1992
By the American Institute of Architect’s Committee on The Environment. Quarterly installments, prices vary (see below).

The backbone of the ERG are the materials assessments, including life-cycle analyses and detailed reports about various building materials from an environmental perspective. Funded in part by an $800,000 grant from the EPA... Read more

Product Review

November 1, 1992
Wood-Fiber Cement Blocks

If it were just a new type of concrete form for foundation walls, Faswall would be an interesting product. But it’s much more than that. Faswall blocks offer exciting new possibilities for building houses and small buildings that are affordable, non-toxic, and made with high recycled-content materials. Adapting a... Read more

Op-Ed

November 1, 1992
Perspective

In October, 1871, in small barn on Chicago’s Southwest Side, Mrs. O’Leary’s cow kicked over a kerosene lantern. The tinder-dry wood-frame building ignited in a fire that destroyed half of Chicago. Devastating fires were not new to our nation, but this was exceptional. Something had to be done. We had to begin building structures... Read more

News Brief

November 1, 1992

By Janet Marinelli with Robert Kourik. Little, Brown & Co., 1992. 230 pages, hardcover, $45.

This book skillfully combines a “how-to” approach to sustainable home-building and remodeling, with an inspiring array of case studies and beautiful photographs showcasing environmental design strategies. Clearly reflecting the author’s first... Read more

Product Review

November 1, 1992
Spin-A-Bin

Kitchen recycling organizers, called “a hot new design frontier” in

The Naturally Elegant Home (see review, page 14), are proliferating nationwide. One innovative item, introduced last year by Feeny Manufacturing Company, replaces the common corner-cabinet lazy susan with three rotating bins for separating recyclables. The... Read more

News Analysis

November 1, 1992
First Certified “Sustainably Harvested” Plywood

Sustainably harvested wood resources just took a giant leap forward with the first certified sustainably produced plywood. Springfield Forest Products of Springfield, Oregon, and Trus Joist MacMillan provided materials for the roof of an environmental prototype store in Lawrence, Kansas. The store... Read more