BuildingGreen Report

Op-Ed

June 1, 2001

Our Newsbrief on page 5 of

EBN

Vol. 10, No. 4 about the Maine Hospital Association incorrectly identified the Natural Resources Council of Maine as the Natural Resources

Defense Council of Maine. Our apologies.

Energy use at the Vermont Law School’s Oakes Hall isn’t quite as low as we reported in our case study (

... Read more

News Brief

June 1, 2001

What used to be a trickle of finished wood products from Asia to the United States is now a flood. Furniture imports from China alone have risen from approximately $21 million in 1989 to nearly $1 billion in 1999. For environmental groups such as the Rainforest Action Network, the trend may be a golden opportunity to alter forestry practices in... Read more

News Analysis

June 1, 2001

When a regional astronomy club based in Springfield, Vermont raised opposition to a new state prison slated for the town, the state hired lighting engineer (and new

EBN Advisory Board member) Nancy Clanton to come up with a plan for reducing light pollution in the prison design. While her firm came up with an outdoor lighting plan for... Read more

News Brief

May 1, 2001

The East Lake Commons community in Dekalb County, Georgia, has received a

National AIA-HUD Housing and Community Design Award for 2001 for excellence in community design that incorporates mixed use and mixed income. East Lake Commons was designed by Village Habitat Design, LLC, with Greg Ramsey, principal-in-charge. Southface Energy... Read more

News Brief

May 1, 2001

The future looks bright for brownfield sites. On April 25, the U.S. Senate passed the

Brownfields Revitalization and Environmental Restoration Act of 2001 (S.350) in a unanimous 99-0 vote. The bill, if approved by the House and signed into law by President Bush, would provide liability protection for innocent landowners and significant... Read more

News Brief

May 1, 2001

On Monday, April 23, The American Institute of Architects (AIA) and its Committee on the Environment (COTE) announced the winners of the Top Ten Green Projects initiative at the Forum 2001 Conference in Washington, D.C. Winners were selected for their success in the integration of architecture, technology, and natural systems. Contact... Read more

Op-Ed

May 1, 2001
It was great to hear from so many of you again—over 200 subscribers completed and returned our second reader survey this past fall. We pored over the returns, looking for trends, ways we can improve

EBN, and things not to change. It was particularly interesting to compare the current results with those from our first subscriber survey conducted... Read more

News Brief

May 1, 2001

At the 2001 Convention of The American Institute of Architects in Denver, AIA members reacted remarkably quickly to the Bush Administrations Energy Policy, which was released as the convention got under way. On May 19, 2001 delegates passed a resolution titled “

Design and Energy Efficiency Initiative-Committee on the Environment,”... Read more

News Analysis

May 1, 2001
EBN

recently reported on sulfurous emissions from painted drywall (

EBN feature

Vol. 9, No. 11), but the actual source of the problem was a mystery. We now have some answers. According to Joe Lstiburek of Building Science Corporation, some painstaking investigation and very expensive chemical sampling has identified the problem:... Read more

News Brief

May 1, 2001

Advances in wireless communication and Global Positioning System

(GPS) tracking are improving mass transit. A system created by NextBus sends users automated phone alerts when a designated bus is nearing their bus stop. The system has been extensively tested in San Francisco and was recently installed in Vail, Colorado. For information... Read more

Op-Ed

May 1, 2001
Jerelyn Wilson

(who is married to Alex) helped to launch

EBN and build our readership in the early ’90s. Now she has returned as Outreach Director and will be working on new ways to familiarize the building community with

EBN and our other products.

Among other tasks, she is contacting workshop presenters and conference... Read more

News Brief

May 1, 2001

by James Wines, edited by Philip Jodidio, 2000. Taschen; Köln, Germany. Paperback, 240 pages, $24.99

“Without art, the whole idea of sustainability fails.” With this principle at its core,

Green Architecture argues that technological approaches to reducing the environmental impacts of buildings are, in themselves, not enough to head off... Read more

News Analysis

May 1, 2001
On March 23, Dewees Island developer John L. Knott Jr. and the City of North Charleston, South Carolina announced a 3,000-acre (1,200 ha) urban revitalization project—“the largest such effort in the world,” according to Knott. Four years of behind-the-scenes planning and negotiations with public officials were needed to come up with the plan,... Read more

News Brief

May 1, 2001

Scientists at NREL have achieved a

new efficiency record for cadmium telluride photovoltaic cells. The new record of 16.4% beat the previous mark of 15.8%, which had stood since 1992. Cadmium telluride is an increasingly attractive PV technology. First Solar’s new 100 MW CdTe plant in Toledo, Ohio began operation this spring (see

... Read more

News Brief

May 1, 2001
On April 12, 2001 the U.S. Department of Energy released EnergyPlus, the successor to its venerable DOE-2

energy simulation software. For many years, DOE-2 has been the standard energy modeling tool for large buildings and the benchmark against which other simulation tools are tested. It has some weaknesses, however, including being notoriously... Read more

News Brief

May 1, 2001

California gave a big boost to small power producers in the state by

increasing the cap on power-production systems that can feed power into the grid through

net metering provisions. The cap has been increased from 10 kilowatts to 1 megawatt. Net metering laws or regulations in more than 30 states allow power producers to “run... Read more

News Brief

May 1, 2001

by Norbert Lechner, 2001. John Wiley & Sons, New York. Hardcover, 640 pages, $85

The Second Edition of

Heating, Cooling, Lighting is one of the most useful and important books on building design in the last ten years. The book is not inexpensive, but it’s worth every penny. Norbert Lechner, an architecture professor at Auburn... Read more

News Brief

May 1, 2001
Nigel Howard

has accepted a position as Vice President of the U.S. Green Building Council, with primary responsibility for technical development and implementation of the LEED™ Green Building Rating System. Until November 2000, Howard was with the Building Research Establishment in the U.K., where he oversaw that organization’s influential... Read more

News Brief

May 1, 2001
EPA Energy Star® has just refined its logos and their use. Most important, there is now only one certification mark for all labeled products, including homes. The growth of all the various Energy Star programs prompted this effort to

consolidate Energy Star brand awareness among consumers. In a recent letter to all partners, the manager of the... Read more

Op-Ed

May 1, 2001

I read with great interest your recent article “Getting the ‘Right Stuff’: A Guide to Green Building Retailers” (

EBN

Vol. 10, No. 4). Your newsletter has always been a source of valuable, and credible, information. I would like to tell you a bit about my company and point out a couple of differences of opinion I have with your... Read more