News Brief
, based in Seattle, announced on July 18 an agreement to acquire
The Timber Company—the division of Georgia-Pacific that has owned and managed all 4.4 million acres (1.8 million ha) of G-P’s timberland. The combined company, with 7.9 million acres (3.2 million ha), will be the second-largest private timberland... Read more
News Analysis
On June 13, Senator Bob Smith (Republican–NH) introduced the Energy Efficient Buildings Incentives Act (S. 2718) to Congress. The bill would provide tax deductions for the following residential and commercial energy efficiency improvements: whole-building performance, PV systems, certified solar... Read more
Product Review
The TranStar... Read more
News Brief
by Bruce Ferguson, Richard Pinkham, and Timothy Collins, 1999. Rocky Mountain Institute, Snowmass, Colorado; 970/927-3851, www.rmi.org. Oversize spiral-bound, 32 pages, $24.95 (plus $5.50 shipping)
Re-Evaluating Stormwater presents the results of an intensive three-day “charrette” in 1998 by 60 local and... Read more
Product Review
Op-Ed
With reference to your June 2000 (EBN Vol. 9, No. 6) editorial entitled “Perspective: Green Building Tax Credits? No, Thanks!” you are entirely correct—the last time the federal government offered tax credits for solar energy applications, they made a monumental mistake, one that almost destroyed the solar industry... Read more
Feature
News Analysis
On June 12, 2000 the National Science Foundation released its
National Assessment Synthesis Report for a 60-day comment period. This report is the culmination of a research program initiated in 1990 by the Global Change Research Act. Included in it are the results of... Read more
News Brief
In response to ongoing environmental concerns with refrigerants such as HCFCs and HFCs, a naturally occurring fluid may be making a comeback:
carbon dioxide. Although CO2 is the principal greenhouse gas, compared to most other refrigerants on a per-molecule basis it is extremely benign. According to the July 14, 2000 issue of... Read more
Op-Ed
I am an architect interested in environmental issues.
EBN is always my first source in searching for information about environmental products because of its clear summaries and comparisons. Your “Recycled Synthetic Roofing Shingles” product review (
Vol. 9, No. 5 – May 2000) raises two... Read more
News Analysis
A ribbon-cutting ceremony for the 50-unit Erie-Ellington Homes housing project was held on June 22. The triplex units cost $94... Read more
News Brief
On June 30, 2000 two dozen representatives of various design-related organizations (joined by deans from some of the nation’s leading architecture schools via video teleconference) met at the World Resources Institute in Washington, D.C. to discuss
sustainability in architectural education. The event was organized by The American... Read more
News Analysis
The
Innvironments® series from Innovations® in Wallcoverings picked up Best of Show at the recent NeoCon® event. Three products make up the series. Eco-Alchemy is a scrubbable Type II (general use in areas of average traffic and scuffing) covering made of recyclable nylon on a polyester and wood pulp backing, which allows... Read more
News Brief
by Ken Yeang, 1999. Prestel Verlag, Munich. Paperback, 304 pages, $29.95
The challenges presented by Ken Yeang inThe Green Skyscraper start right with the cover shot—an arresting model of the Tokyo Nara Building revealing several floors of skyscraper devoted to gardens and a soft, sculptured form—and... Read more
News Brief
The
Arctic ice cap has thinned by 40% over the past 40 years, according to preliminary findings presented at a May meeting of the Arctic Research Consortium of the United States. Climate changes will make it difficult for native Alaskans to maintain subsistence life-styles, say researchers, because of declines in walrus seal populations... Read more
News Analysis
Vol. 7, No. 1) with introduction of 100% certified-wood trusses.
William E. Hayward, President and CEO of the company, called this is a “landmark event in the construction industry... Read more
News Analysis
Previously, the FTC maintained two categories for measuring energy... Read more
News Brief
A study released in May by the Harvard School of Public Health links
air pollution from two coal-fired power plants—in Salem and Somerset, Massachusetts—to 43,000 asthma attacks and 159 premature deaths. More than 32 million people in New England, New York, and New Jersey are exposed to plant emissions. Both plants are owned by PG&E... Read more
News Brief
by Daniel D. Chiras, 2000. Chelsea Green Publishing Co., White River Jct., Vt. Paperback, 470 pages, $35.
Simply put, this is the most comprehensive and most useful introduction to natural building systems and practices available. Author Daniel Chiras is an educator and writer (his high school textbook,... Read more
Op-Ed
Tax credit legislation supporting green buildings was recently signed into law in New York (see EBN
Vol. 9, No. 5), and the push for similar legislation seems... Read more



