Op-Ed
we can be doing. We’re committed to greening the building industry, but how are we doing... Read more
News Analysis
A well-intentioned lead-based paint disposal rule proposed by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has inadvertently caused confusion and concern in the building materials recycling and salvage industries, but the situation is improving. EPA intended to facilitate lead abatement by... Read more
News Brief
Researchers at the University of Florida have demonstrated that existing stack-scrubbing technology can be applied to wood-burning boilers to remove and render insoluble volatilized heavy metals from the
incineration of CCA-treated wood (see
EBN
Vol. 6, No. 3 for background discussion). Bubbling stack exhaust through... Read more
Feature
Builder John Abrams of Martha’s Vineyard is a storyteller. One of his favorite stories is about Gandhi:
A woman approaches the well-known visionary seeking help with her son’s addiction to sweets. He listens to her concerns but does not meet with the child. Over the following weeks she asks him several more times for help. Each time he... Read moreNews Brief
EBN
Vol. 7, No. 10). The company now pays the freight (within the lower 48) on trailer loads—30,000 ft2 (2,800 m2) or more—of approved tiles, has streamlined the process of recycling, and gives great guidance on job-site practices for efficient... Read more
News Brief
William Bobenhausen, Director of Sustainability at Steven Winter Associates (SWA) of Norwalk, Connecticut, was conferred the honor of “Fellow” by the American Institute of Architects at the May 2000 AIA Convention in Philadelphia. Meanwhile, SWA has received an official citation from the Connecticut General Assembly for “exemplary efforts to... Read more
Op-Ed
News Brief
Champion Enterprises and the U.S. Department of Energy have partnered to produce
the first HUD-code (mobile) home made entirely of structural insulated panels (SIPs). The 1,384 ft2 (129 m2) home, built in Silverton, Oregon, uses SIPs in the walls, floors, and ceilings. Two SIP manufacturers, Premier Building Systems and Precision Panel... Read more
News Analysis
In what EPA is calling the “largest enforcement penalty ever taken against a single ‘smokestack’ company under the Clean Air Act,” Portland, Oregon-based Willamette Industries is expected to spend in excess of $90 million in fines and pollution controls. The company violated the Clean Air Act by failing to install proper pollution controls or... Read more
News Brief
Urban Options, a nonprofit organization in East Lansing, Michigan that is dedicated to improving the quality of the urban environment, is sponsoring its Second Annual
Tour de Sprawl—a bicycle and/or bus tour of Meridian Township—on October 8. For details, call Urban Options at 517/374-4444. This should be a companion to the... Read more
Product Review
Just as common window screening keeps airborne pests out of buildings, Termi-Mesh keeps out subterranean termites. But that is where the analogy ends. If you are going to bury a screen underground, build walls on top of it, wrap it tightly around pipes, make it “chew-proof”... Read more
News Brief
On August 8, after lengthy consultation with a number of environmental groups,
Lowe’s Companies, Inc. released a progressive statement on its wood purchasing policies. Among other measures, the policy aims to identify ancient forests and eliminate wood purchases from them, and to discourage conversion of native forests to... Read more
News Analysis
On August 1, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation merged its GreenStone cellulose insulation division with the U.S. Fiber division of Casella Waste Systems, Inc. to form U.S. GreenFiber, LLC. With the creation of this 50:50 joint venture, both U.S. Fiber and GreenStone have ceased to exist. The new company will... Read more
News Brief
A study conducted for the Federal Energy Management Agency (FEMA), reported in the
New York Times on June 28, has concluded that at least a quarter of the
houses within 500 feet of U.S. coastlines may be lost to erosion during the next 60 years. If sea levels rise due to global warming, coastline erosion could be even worse.... Read more
News Brief
In announcing a
Global Coal Initiative to research clean coal technologies, the Electric Power Research Institute forecasts a fourfold increase in worldwide power demand by 2050. “Meeting this estimated demand will require the equivalent of building a new 1,000-megawatt power plant somewhere in the world every two days for 50 years,”... Read more
Feature
News Brief
Meanwhile,
polar ice is melting. The July 21 issue of
Science reports that the massive Greenland Ice Sheet, which contains roughly 10% of all fresh water on earth, is melting at a rate of 12 cubic miles (51 km3) per year. This melting results in 0.13 mm of sea level rise worldwide annually, according to NASA researchers.
... Read moreNews Analysis
Few efficiency standards have generated as many jokes and complaints as the 1.6 gallons per flush (6 liter) toilet requirement. The Energy Policy Act of 1992 required manufacturers to reduce the quantity of water per flush to 1.6 by 1994. Some say the industry was caught off guard and was given insufficient time to... Read more
Op-Ed
The U.S. Green Building Council would like to thank
Environmental Building News for an excellent article in the June issue on the development and content of LEED™ Green Building Rating System (EBN
Vol. 9, No. 6). We are extremely excited by the market response we have seen and believe that LEED is, and... Read more
News Brief
Although the number of
local green building programs is still relatively small—there are fewer than 20 nationwide—forces are growing. In June of this year, the Master Builders Association of King and Snohomish Counties (Greater Seattle) released their Built Green™ program. Partners for the home builder-based program include King and... Read more





