BuildingGreen Report

News Brief

December 1, 2002
The U.S. Green Building Council awarded its first

Sacred Tree Leadership Awardsin Austin for outstanding contributions to green building. Ray Anderson, founder and chairman of Interface, Inc. won the

Green Business Award. The

USGBC Leadership Award went to Rob Watson, director of the Natural Resource Defense Council’s... Read more

Op-Ed

December 1, 2002

For years, advocates of sustainable design have argued that interest in green building will take off when it stops being just about values and starts making good business sense. Thanks to LEED™ and the astounding success of the U.S. Green Building Council, that day seems to have arrived. The Council’s Austin conference was flooded by a wave of... Read more

News Brief

December 1, 2002

U.S. Green Building Council, Washington, DC 20036; 202/828-7422, www.usgbc.org. Brochure, 14 pages, single copies available free from USGBC Marketing Department.

At the Austin conference, the U.S. Green Building Council unveiled an attractive new brochure, “Making the Business Case for High Performance Green Buildings.” The concise, clear... Read more

News Analysis

December 1, 2002
While far too much was presented at the conference to permit a comprehensive overview, the

EBN editors, along with longtime educator, author, and green architect Bill Bobenhausen, FAIA, attended many sessions and summarized a few highlights below. Presentation materials, including PowerPoint files, abstracts, and papers, are available online at... Read more

News Brief

December 1, 2002

Americans may want to “live larger” but not necessarily in larger homes. Over 1,000 Americans were recently asked by Taylor Nelson Sofres Intersearch, on behalf of the industry trade group The Hardwood Information Center, to

describe the perfect house. Americans dream of an average 2,500 ft2 (230 m2) house, according to the survey—not... Read more

News Brief

December 1, 2002
David M. Keith

, a principal at Boulder, Colorado’s Marshall Design, Inc., was named a Fellow of the

Illuminating Engineering Society of North America (IESNA) for his contributions to the improved efficiency of outdoor and indoor lighting systems, including research in roadway lighting and lighting control systems.

News Brief

December 1, 2002

by Kathryn Houser and Michael Myers, 2002. Published by Sustainable Living Alliance, PO Box 33368, Austin, TX 78764, funded by a grant from the U.S. Department of Energy. The manual and CD-ROM are available free of charge while supplies last. E-mail your request with contact information to rainfall@swbell.net or call 512-326-4636.

... Read more

News Brief

December 1, 2002

The American Institute of Architects (AIA) and the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) signed an agreement in October formalizing their

partnership in the promotion of energy-efficient, environmentally responsive buildings. The memorandum of understanding (MOU) extends and expands on a 1996 MOU that had been allowed to expire. In listing... Read more

News Brief

December 1, 2002
At a November 13 reception in Austin, the Sustainable Buildings Industry Council (SBIC) presented their

2002 Best Practice Sustainability Awards. Awards were made in five categories—details at www.sbicouncil.org:

Sustainable Policy Initiatives:

The Cool Metal Roofing Coalition, a nonprofit organization founded last year... Read more

News Brief

December 1, 2002

The National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) is seeking applicants for its 2003 National Green Building Awards, to be announced at the National Green Building Conference March 30 through April 1, 2003 in Baltimore, Maryland. Applications are due December 31. For more information, call 888-602-HOME or visit www.nahbrc.org.

 

Product Review

November 1, 2002
An increasingly familiar sight in new commercial construction, interior lightshelves are gaining popularity for their effectiveness at distributing daylight deep into a room while controlling glare. When coupled with a photosensor-controlled lighting system, lightshelves dramatically reduce the use of electric lights and therefore the cooling load... Read more

Feature

November 1, 2002
Like many communities, our town of Brattleboro was faced with a huge problem in its existing high school complex. The sprawling, dilapidated, 230,000 ft2 (21,000 m2) school for 1,600 students—actually a high school, middle school, and career education center all in one—was built in five stages between 1951 and 1991. It is a health hazard, the... Read more

News Brief

November 1, 2002

The

Clean Water Act celebrated its 30th birthday on October 18. The law has enjoyed bipartisan support and has accomplished much to protect America’s water resources. Since its inception in 1972, for example, the act has slowed the rate of wetland loss by 75% and doubled the number of households served by sewage treatment plants.... Read more

News Brief

November 1, 2002

Land surface changes may be as much to blame for

global climate change as greenhouse gases, according to research by Roger Pielke Sr., professor of atmospheric science at Colorado State University, and his colleagues. The study, published in a recent issue of the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London and released by... Read more

News Analysis

November 1, 2002

The Energy Star™ Commercial Buildings program recognizes buildings that perform in the top 25% of their class in terms of energy use. As part of that program, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) set up a Web-based tool called

Portfolio Manager. Users enter information from their energy bills into Portfolio Manager, which... Read more

News Brief

November 1, 2002
Home Depot has expanded its solar power program, launched in 2001 in

California, to the East Coast. Visitors to select Delaware, New Jersey, and New York Home Depot stores can now choose between AstroPower’s SunUPS® and SunLine™ Solar Electric Home Power Systems. Home Depot is selling, installing, and servicing the systems under its “At-Home... Read more

Op-Ed

November 1, 2002
Environmental Building News

executive editor Alex Wilson testified in October before the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee, which has jurisdiction over all U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) programs. Wilson joined Claire Barnett, founder and director of the Healthy Schools Network, and Lois Gibbs, director of the Center for... Read more

News Brief

November 1, 2002

Under a September executive order signed by Governor Gary Locke, every Washington state agency must establish

sustainability objectives and prepare biennial sustainability plans. The newly named Sustainability Coordinator and Sustainability Advisory Council will organize the plans around energy and water efficiency and a shift to... Read more

News Brief

November 1, 2002

Ninth International Conference on Indoor Air Quality and Climate, Hal Levin, Editor. CD-ROM version: $100; 5-volume printed version: $200. Shipping additional. Download an order form:

www.indoorair2002.org.

If you’re doing research on indoor air quality issues, you shouldn’t be without this treasure trove of information. Every oral... Read more

News Brief

November 1, 2002

The

Oak Hill Fund, formed this year after the W. Alton Jones Foundation was split into three separate foundations, is seeking grant applicants for its Environmentally Sustainable Affordable Design Program. The program includes four initiatives:

•Education, for programs with academic institutions (including K–12);

•Sustainable and... Read more