BuildingGreen Report

Op-Ed

March 1, 1999
Order from E Build Online!

If you haven’t visited our Web site (www.BuildingGreen.com) recently, you may want to take a look. We’re continuing to provide a summary of each issue along with the date it was mailed, so you can check to see if you’re getting

EBN in a timely manner. The entire bibliography from our December issue is online,... Read more

News Analysis

March 1, 1999
High Drama Over Headwaters Purchase

In the end, it came down to the wire. After 12 years of protests, negotiations, offers, government appropriations, and a last-minute collapse of the deal, the agreement to purchase 10,000 acres (4,050 ha) of old-growth redwood forest belonging to the Pacific Lumber Company (PalCo) was finally concluded... Read more

News Analysis

March 1, 1999
Gore Announces “Livability Agenda”

On January 11 at the American Institute of Architects headquarters in Washington, Vice President Al Gore announced the Administration’s wide-ranging Livability Agenda. This is a high-priority, multifaceted effort to reduce sprawl, to minimize the time we spend in traffic, and generally to make our communities... Read more

News Brief

March 1, 1999
Newsbriefs

For the first time ever,

net imports of petroleum into the United States have exceeded 50% in a single year. According to the Energy Information Administration of the U.S. Department of Energy, net petroleum imports by the U.S. in 1998 averaged 50.6%, up from the previous record of 49.9% in 1997 and significantly higher than... Read more

News Brief

March 1, 1999

According to the

Los Angeles Times, a storage tank exploded on February 26 at the

SEGS II solar power plant in Barstow, California. The 900,000-gallon (3.4 million l) tank held Therminol, a hydraulic fluid that is used as a heat-transfer fluid, and was still burning four hours after the explosion. Heated to 850°F (450°C) by... Read more

Product Review

March 1, 1999
A New Option for Afterlife

Conventional burial or cremation of the dead in this country bears a lot of resemblance to toxic waste disposal. For burial, most bodies are saturated with toxic embalming chemicals, hermetically sealed inside metal or highly finished wood caskets, and encased in impervious concrete burial vaults, all of which is... Read more

News Brief

March 1, 1999
Newsbriefs

Laurence Doxsey is leaving his position as Sustainability Officer for the City of Austin to take a Community Builder fellowship with the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) in San Antonio. Doxsey was a leader and key spokesperson for Austin’s groundbreaking Green Builder Program from its inception. Along with his... Read more

Op-Ed

March 1, 1999
Natural Paints from LIVOS

Your February feature on paints (“Paint the Room Green,”

Vol. 8, No. 2) certainly made an impression. While we welcome scrutiny, I must point out some overlooked facts.

It’s not clear in Table 2’s “Alternative Paints” section that LIVOS paints are in fact natural, defined by Webster as “existing in or... Read more

News Analysis

March 1, 1999
CRBT Merges With NCAT

This February the Center for Resourceful Building Technology in Missoula, Montana, long a leader in promoting green building practices, merged with the National Center for Appropriate Technology, headquartered in Butte, Montana. CRBT has become a project of NCAT, joining a wide family of NCAT projects that promote... Read more

News Brief

March 1, 1999
Awards & Competitions

The American Institute of Architects/Portland is accepting entries for the

1999 Architecture + Energy Awards: Building Excellence in the Northwest, open to completed major renovations or new commercial buildings in Idaho, Montana, Oregon, and Washington. Awards are based on energy performance, treatment of... Read more

Op-Ed

March 1, 1999
Cohouses Are Smaller

In your recent feature on house size (“Small is Beautiful”,

Vol. 8, No. 1), you trace the average size of single-family housing from approximately 1,100 ft2 (102 m2) in the 1940s–1950s to an average of 2,150 ft2 (200 m2) today. Over the past 10 years, the concept of Cohousing—the creation of small communities of... Read more

News Analysis

March 1, 1999
Interface Increasing Use of Green Power

The Interface Corporation is making good on its pledge to reduce dependence on fossil fuels and nonrenewable electricity. On February 19, a 127 peak-kW photovoltaic (PV) array was dedicated at the Bentley Mills carpet factory in City of Industry, California. According to Jim Hartzfeld of Interface,... Read more

News Brief

March 1, 1999

The

American Society for Testing and Materials (ASTM) has created a new Subcommittee on Sustainability within Committee E-6 on Performance of Buildings. Goals of the new subcommittee E06-71 are to stimulate knowledge, research, and standards on the environmental performance and sustainability of individual buildings or systems, building... Read more

News Brief

March 1, 1999
Applied Power Corporation

(APC) of Lacey, Washington announced on February 26 its acquisition of

Ascension Technology, Inc., headquartered in Waltham, Massachusetts. APC, a subsidiary of Idaho Power, is a leading photovoltaic (PV) systems provider. Ascension Technology, founded in 1987, is a leading developer of balance-of-system... Read more

Feature

March 1, 1999

An important strategy for protecting prime agricultural land, open space, and woodlands against the forces of sprawl is to build within existing urban areas and on previously disturbed sites. Unfortunately, many such sites suffer the scars of heavy use in a time when environmental controls were unknown or unheeded. Their soil and groundwater... Read more

Case Study

The North Elevation of Pearl Court faces Kearney Street, a pedestrian mall that is closed to vehicles for three blocks. The balconies above the entrance are accessible to all residents.

March 1, 1999
Pearl Court Provides Affordable City Housing

 

A new housing complex in Portland, Oregon’s emerging River District exemplifies many of the best features of urban redevelopment. Pearl Court is a reclaimed brownfield site with energy-efficient construction, pedestrian access to mass transit, and affordable housing in a single 199-unit... Read more

News Brief

February 1, 1999
Newsbriefs

The American Society of Heating, Refrigeration, and Air-Conditioning Engineers, Inc. (ASHRAE) is soliciting comments on six Independent Substantive Changes to its

Standard 90.1-1989R: “Energy Standard for Buildings Except Low-Rise Residential Buildings.” The most extensive sections being modified are those on building... Read more

News Analysis

February 1, 1999
Polyiso-Core SIPs to Be Ozone-Safe

A structural insulated panel (SIP) plant being completed in Williamsport, Pennsylvania will likely be the first in North America to produce polyisocyanurate-core SIPs that do not harm the ozone layer. Agile Building Systems’ 110,000 sq. ft. (10,200 m2) plant will initially use the industry-standard HCFC-141b... Read more

News Brief

February 1, 1999

A

Nursing and Biomedical Sciences classroom building being designed for the

University of Texas at Houston by Vancouver-based Patkau Architects received a 1998 Award of Excellence from

Canadian Architect magazine. Juror Peter Busby lauded the project’s “integration of an environmental design approach with an excellent... Read more

News Brief

February 1, 1999
Efficient Wood Use in Residential Construction

by Ann Edminster and Sami Yassa, 1998. Natural Resources Defense Council, 40 W. 20th Street, New York, NY 10011-4211; 212/727-2700, www.nrdc.org. Paperback, 112 pages, $15 + $3 shipping

Too often forest conservation activists promote the use of non-wood construction systems without... Read more