BuildingGreen Report

News Analysis

March 1, 2004
Obex, Inc., manufacturer of NovaWood

® landscape timbers, fencing, and pavers made from 100% post-consumer plastics, closed its doors in February. The Stamford, Connecticut company survived perennial capital shortages over its 15 years until an accident last April left owner Celeste Johnson unable to maintain sales streams, which plummeted more... Read more

News Brief

March 1, 2004
CertainTeed’s MemBrain

™ vapor retarder, which changes permeability according to relative humidity, has been awarded an Innovative Housing Technology Award in the energy category from the NAHB Research Center and EH Publishing. CertainTeed is online at www.certainteed.com. See

EBN

Vol. 12, No. 11 for a review of MemBrain.

... Read more

Product Review

March 1, 2004
Many of us living and working in parts of the country without access to inexpensive natural gas rely on fuel oil for heating. In the Northeast, for example, 36% of homes and 38% of commercial buildings are heated with oil. The Upper Midwest also uses a lot of fuel oil, while Alaska relies on both heating oil and kerosene. It was in Alaska in mid-... Read more

News Analysis

March 1, 2004
According to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), freight trucks and locomotives use 35 billion gallons (1.5x10

11 liters) of diesel fuel each year, emitting over 350 million metric tons of carbon dioxide. Facing a predicted 25% increase in these numbers by 2012, EPA launched a new program in February focused on making America’s... Read more

News Brief

March 1, 2004

A new program is making it easier for Puget Sound residents to make their homes more efficient. Through a partnership with Efficiency Services Group (a division of Portland General Electric), HomeStreet Bank has started the

Mortgage Options for Resource Efficiency (MORE™) program. Participants in the program receive custom home energy... Read more

Feature

March 1, 2004
Even the greenest of architects and builders seldom give much consideration to wiring in buildings. Sure, we’d like to use products with minimal environmental and health impacts, but how significant can wiring be? We don’t really install that much wiring, relative to other materials. And there isn’t much choice anyway, is there? Don’t fire codes... Read more

News Brief

March 1, 2004
The community of

Civano, in southeast Tucson, Arizona, was named Best New Community in

Sunset Magazine’s annual Best Places to Live story. The 818-acre (330 ha), mixed-use community was designed around New Urbanist ideals, with a strong sense of community and place (see

EBN

Vol. 9, No. 7). The homes use 50% less energy... Read more

Op-Ed

March 1, 2004

Please explain what makes “polyester yarn … impregnated with an acrylic-based material” fire resistant, as claimed in the article “PVC-Free Interior Shade Screening from Nysan” (

Vol. 12, No. 12). As far as we know, polyester and acrylics are both flammable.

Tim Burns, President

The Vinyl Institute

Arlington,... Read more

News Brief

March 1, 2004

The

Home Builders Association of Metro Denver, which recently trademarked the name Built Green

® for its residential green building program (the largest in the nation), has issued a cease and desist request against Vermont’s

Building for Social Responsibility (BSR) over its use of the name Vermont Built Green for its own... Read more

News Brief

March 1, 2004

Interface Flooring has sold more than a million square yards (840,000 m

2) of climate-neutral

Cool Carpet™ since its introduction in August 2003 (see

EBN

Vol. 12, No. 10). Through the Cool Carpet initiative, customers are funding greenhouse-gas reduction projects to offset the emissions resulting from the carpet... Read more

News Analysis

March 1, 2004
Bonded Logic, Inc., manufacturer of UltraTouch cotton-fiber insulation (see

EBN

Vol. 9, No. 11), plans to build its newest manufacturing facility, in Chandler, Arizona, according to LEED

® standards. Charlie Popeck, cohost of the PBS show

Build It Green!, is acting as green building consultant on the 108,000 ft

2 (... Read more

News Brief

February 1, 2004

The Boston Society of Architects has approved the Institution Recycling Network (IRN) to offer American Institute of Architects

Learning Units in construction waste management. IRN, based in Concord, New Hampshire, is a cooperative organization that works to improve the financial and operating performance of recycling programs at... Read more

Op-Ed

February 1, 2004

Last October’s issue of

EBN (

Vol. 12, No. 10) was another great one. My non-expert two cents on the filtration issue is that the best way to do HVAC in buildings (at least buildings other than single-family homes) is to separate space conditioning, which is an intermittent load, from ventilation, which is always present during... Read more

Product Review

February 1, 2004
The NanoLux™ compact fluorescent lamps (CFLs), just introduced by Westinghouse Lighting Corporation, open up dramatic new design opportunities for fluorescent lighting. These CFLs incorporate tiny electronic ballasts in the screw base so that the smallest lamp is about half the size of a standard incandescent bulb.

The product line includes 34... Read more

Feature

February 1, 2004
When NRDC (Natural Resources Defense Council) opened its new office in Santa Monica, California on November 13, 2003, they had a lot to celebrate. After years of bouncing from one rented office space to another, NRDC now has a permanent Southern California office—named after Robert Redford, actor, Santa Monica native, and NRDC board member since... Read more

News Analysis

February 1, 2004

In its Beyond 2000 Solid Waste Master Plan (SWMP), the Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) set a goal of reducing nonmunicipal solid waste by 88% by 2010. In order to reach that goal, the SWMP has proposed banning the disposal of construction and demolition (C&D) waste at both private and municipally owned landfills... Read more

News Brief

February 1, 2004

Global climate change will prompt

widespread extinction within decades, according to an international group of 19 scientists. The group studied more than 1,000 species representing roughly 20% of the Earth’s terrestrial surface and found that, if current warming trends continue, 15–37% of them will be “committed to extinction” by 2050.... Read more

News Brief

February 1, 2004

David L. Grumman, editor. American Society of Heating, Refrigeration and Air-Conditioning Engineers, Inc., 2004, paperback, 170 pages, $99 ($79 for ASHRAE members). Contact ASHRAE Customer Service at 1-800-527-4723 or 404-636-8400, or visit the ASHRAE.org Bookstore.

Engineers can be a literal bunch. A chapter in the

ASHRAE... Read more

News Analysis

February 1, 2004
In the face of concerns that building products with high levels of recycled content might be problematic in terms of indoor air emissions, the California Integrated Waste Management Board commissioned a study to investigate the matter. The “Building Materials Emissions Study,” carried out by the California Department of Health Services, tested a... Read more

News Brief

February 1, 2004

Traces of fluoxetine hydrochloride, the active ingredient in the drug

Prozac, have been found in fish in central Texas, according to a Baylor University study led by toxicologist Dr. Bryan Brooks. “Maybe it makes you a happy fish and you’re kind of hanging out,” said Brooks, but he questions the drug’s effect on the ability of fish to... Read more