BuildingGreen Report

Product Review

September 1, 1993
Hi-Rise Recycling

Apartment buildings have for the most part been left out of residential recycling programs because of the difficulty of getting residents to haul recyclables to a storage area by hand. As recycling requirements are adopted by more and more municipalities, however, architects and building owners find themselves forced to... Read more

News Brief

September 1, 1993

As reported in a Congressional hearing in June, the EPA has so far been unable to duplicate the results of carpet toxicity studies done by Anderson Labs of Dedham, Massachusetts (see EBN

Vol. 2, No. 2, “Mouse-Killing Carpets”). For reasons that remain unclear, the EPA used different test procedures that included percolating the exposed... Read more

News Analysis

September 1, 1993
New White House Leadership on Wetlands

On August 24 the Clinton Administration announced a policy for the nation’s wetlands that aims to end years of confusion and infighting among various federal agencies with overlapping jurisdictions. Initial reaction to the plan from all sides was mixed, although most people are waiting to see how things... Read more

Feature

September 1, 1993
In the wake of this summer’s devastating floods in the Midwest, more and more people are recog-nizing that levees and dams may not be the only way—or even the best way—to deal with floods. Regardless of the measures taken, most floodplains will ultimately flood, and we might do better to work with this natural cycle—and minimize damages—than to... Read more

News Brief

September 1, 1993

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has launched IAQ INFO, the Indoor Air Quality Information Clearinghouse. IAQ INFO has specialists who can provide information on a wide range of issues relating to indoor air quality: pollutant sources, health effects, testing, control measures, and relevant standards/guidelines. Along with answering... Read more

News Analysis

September 1, 1993
Electricity from Wastewater

The world's most productive geothermal electrical generation site, Geysers geothermal field in Lake County, California, has been running out of steam. And Lake County Sanitation officials were facing expensive options for disposing of their partially treated wastewater. Now it appears that they have solved both... Read more

Op-Ed

September 1, 1993
Defending Vinyl

I recently received a copy of the May/June issue of

Environmental Building News and wanted to respond to the article “Problems with PVC” that covered Greenpeace’s campaign to eliminate chlorine-based compounds, and vinyl in particular.

Although Greenpeace has alleged that vinyl presents a threat to human health... Read more

News Brief

September 1, 1993

The Forest Information Resource System (FORIS), a database on the world’s timber resources, will be released by Tree Talk in November 1993. FORIS is intended to provide wood users with detailed information that will encourage the use of lesser-known and environmentally friendly species. Physical properties of each species, appropriate uses,... Read more

Feature

Should we be recommending cellulose to our clients? If so, on what basis? If not, why—what are its drawbacks?

September 1, 1993

Cellulose insulation has been the darling of the green building movement because of its recycled content, low embodied energy, low-tech processing, and excellent energy conservation performance. But concerns are also raised about health risks for cellulose installers and occupants of cellulose-insulated buildings. In fact, some healthy home... Read more

News Brief

September 1, 1993
The Next American Metropolis: Ecology, Community, and the American Dream

by Peter Calthorpe. Princeton Architectural Press, 1993. Paperback. 175 pages. $24.95.

 

Peter Calthorpe’s latest book is a guide for planners and designers of communities. It begins with a series of essays outlining all the problems with neighborhoods and... Read more

Op-Ed

July 1, 1993
Perspective: A Year Later

The first issue of

EnvironmentalBuilding News was mailed out one year ago to a few hundred subscribers. Six issues later, we have a respectable circulation of well over 1,000. Judging from feedback received, we’re succeeding in what we set out to do: provide useful, unbiased information on how to make buildings... Read more

News Brief

July 1, 1993
Building Better with Less

Steve Loken. 1993. Center for Resourceful Building Technology, PO Box 3866, Missoula, MT 59806; 406/549-7678. 56 pages. $12.50 postpaid.

The ReCraft 90 house was the first in what has become a flurry of environmentally sound demonstration houses. Built in ’90 and ’91 by Steve Loken at the Center for... Read more

Explainer

July 1, 1993
Rooftop Water Collection

The goal of the Florida House Learning Center is to introduce to Floridians techniques for building houses that are environmentally appropriate. To that end, co-founders W. Terry Osborne and June Engman are building a pair of model houses side-by-side for the Sarasota County Cooperative Extension Service. The... Read more

Feature

July 1, 1993
As the finish carpenters pack up their tools and the last coat of paint dries, the new lawn is emerging outside. On what had been a barren construction site only weeks before, grass seedlings are poking up through a layer of carefully spread topsoil, fortified with fertilizer and protected with straw. Around the house are round balls of the most... Read more

News Brief

July 1, 1993

The Northeast Sustainable Energy Association (NESEA) is planning a demonstration building project that will exhibit energy- and resource-efficient technologies and provide office and meeting space for NESEA and affiliated organizations. The “Northeast Sustainability Center” is slated to be built in 1994 in the five-college area of western... Read more

News Analysis

July 1, 1993
Natural Products for Wetlands Erosion Control

Conventional engineering practices for erosion control are a common sight along our highways and waterways: carefully laid banks of barren angular stone called “rip-rap,” barriers of smaller stones encased in wire mesh called “gabions,” and poured concrete retaining walls. Bioengineering offers... Read more

Op-Ed

July 1, 1993
A Good Water-Based Polyurethane

Dear Mr. MacArthur,

I thought your article in EBN (Vol. 2, No. 3) on “Water-based Poly­urethanes” was useful and timely. We now routinely recommend a water-based finish for health reasons, especially if it is applied in cold weather when adequate ventilation is difficult. Did you try a product called “... Read more

News Analysis

July 1, 1993
Clinton’s Timber Policy Announced

The Clinton Administration has announced its plan for dealing with the timber controversy in the Pacific Northwest. The plan was severely criticized by advocates on both sides of the debate even before it was publicly announced. Environmentalists are concerned that it may take away the power courts have had to... Read more

News Brief

July 1, 1993

An excellent workshop entitled “Sustainable Design Solutions” was given by engineer Marc Rosenbaum at the American Solar Energy Society conference and several other locations. Four- or six-hour versions of his workshop can be arranged for interested groups across the country. Contact him at Energysmiths, PO Box 194, Meriden, NH 03770; 603/469-... Read more

News Analysis

July 1, 1993
New Green Buildings Trade Association

A group of product manufacturers and other building professionals has just founded the U.S. Green Building Council, with the goal of promoting environmentally sound and energy-efficient buildings worldwide. The Council was officially established at a May 27 meeting in Washington and already has over thirty... Read more