BuildingGreen Report

Product Review

December 1, 2004
The Speedi-Boot™ boot hanger for air-supply ducts, introduced at Greenbuild 2004 in Portland, is one of those products that you may not know you need until you see it. Introduced in September 2004, it’s a mounting system that allows air supply boots to be tightly sealed to a ceiling, wall, or subfloor. (A boot is the termination that connects a... Read more

News Analysis

December 1, 2004
Qui Baoxing, Ph.D., the vice minister of construction for the People’s Republic of China, announced the adoption of China’s green building strategy during the Greenbuild conference on November 11, 2004. According to China’s newly approved building energy efficiency standard, all new construction will be expected to reduce energy consumption by 50... Read more

News Brief

December 1, 2004

The U.S. Green Building Council recognized the contributions of Christine Ervin, USGBC president and CEO between 1999 and 2004, in the opening session of USGBC Day prior to the 2004 Greenbuild conference in Ervin’s hometown of Portland, Oregon. “Christine was a major force in transforming the building industry,” noted Rick Fedrizzi, current... Read more

Op-Ed

December 1, 2004

Your September 2004 feature article on porous pavement [see

EBN

Vol. 13, No. 9] could not have been more timely. We at the Portland Cement Association (PCA) have noted a tremendous demand for more information on this innovative construction technique. It is just one of the many applications in which concrete provides a... Read more

News Analysis

December 1, 2004
With more than 7,800 attendees, the U.S Green Building Council’s 2004 Greenbuild conference in Portland, Oregon was the biggest yet. The event took place in the Oregon Convention Center, which was among the first projects to achieve certification under the LEED

® for Existing Buildings (LEED-EB) pilot program (see p. 3). As in recent years, the... Read more

News Brief

December 1, 2004

The Emerging Green Builders (EGB) chapter of the U.S. Green Building Council announced during Greenbuild the winners of the third annual USGBC Design Competition, intended to recognize students and young professionals in the building industry. More than 130 teams, including more than 270 individuals from 16 countries, competed to design a... Read more

Product Review

This high-design, lightweight, formaldehyde-free panel is made of waste fiber left over after processing sorghum.

December 1, 2004

Kirei™ is a lightweight, formaldehyde-free panel made from waste fiber left over after processing sorghum, a grain crop grown widely in many parts of the world. The product was developed in Japan in the mid-1990s and introduced to the U.S. market in 2003. Kirei is a Japanese character meaning both clean and beautiful, according to Kirei USA... Read more

News Brief

November 1, 2004
by Amory Lovins et al., with forewords by George P. Shultz and Sir Mark Moody-Stuart. The Rocky Mountain Institute, Snowmass, Colorado, 2004; 328 pages, softcover, $40. Available for sale or free download from RMI ( www.rmi.org or www.oilendgame.org).

Winning the Oil Endgame is classic Amory Lovins and Rocky Mountain Institute. This highly... Read more

News Brief

November 1, 2004

DuPont has reached a tentative settlement in a three-year-old class-action lawsuit that could cost the company $343 million for exposing Ohio and West Virginia communities to perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA), also known as C8 (see

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Vol. 13, No. 3). In the agreement, DuPont will pay $108 million, including $23 million to cover... Read more

News Brief

November 1, 2004

Efficiency Vermont is now accepting applications for their

2005 Energy Efficient Design Awards, to be announced at the Better Buildings by Design conference in February 2005. To be eligible, projects must be located in Vermont and have been completed after January 1, 2001. Posters and registration forms are due December 22, 2004.... Read more

News Brief

November 1, 2004

The wind energy Production Tax Credit (PTC) has been extended through the end of 2005 as part of a tax package signed by President Bush in October 2004. The PTC makes available a tax credit of 1.8 cents for each kilowatt-hour of electricity generated by wind turbines. Although the PTC had expired at the end of 2003, the recent extension is... Read more

News Analysis

November 1, 2004
Bill Browning, a well-known leader in the green building world and member of

EBN’s editorial advisory board, left the full-time employment of the Rocky Mountain Institute (RMI) on July 1, 2004 to work with the John A. Clark Company on the development of Haymount. Haymount is a new town being developed outside of Washington, D.C. with an... Read more

News Brief

November 1, 2004
The Smithsonian Institution’s Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum has announced the winners of the fifth annual

National Design Awards. Recognized for the creation of “buildings, spaces, and places with completely positive intentions,” the architecture firm

William McDonough + Partners was given the

Environment Design Award.... Read more

News Brief

November 1, 2004

Energetech America, LLC has announced plans for “GreenWave Rhode Island,” America’s first wave-energy project. The 500 kilowatt project will tap the power of an “oscillating water column” to force compressed air through a turbine. An existing undersea cable will then transmit the power to the New England electrical grid. The structure will be... Read more

Product Review

November 1, 2004
There is great appeal to the idea of combining solar power generation with such building-component functions as glazing and roofing. Building-integrated photovoltaic (BIPV) glazing systems, available from several manufacturers, provide the combined functions of daylight transmission and power generation. (For more on BIPV applications, see

EBN... Read more

News Brief

November 1, 2004

Haliburton School of the Arts at Fleming College in Ontario has announced a new program in Sustainable Building Design and Construction. Joining other programs in sustainable design at the Boston Architectural Center (see

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Vol. 11, No. 2) and Carnegie Mellon University (see

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Vol. 11, No. 6), Haliburton’s... Read more

News Analysis

November 1, 2004
People who live in sprawling cities are far less healthy than their counterparts in more compact areas, according to a study performed by the nonprofit

Rand® Corporation, based on information from Healthcare for Communities, a survey funded by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The survey analyzed health data for more than 8,600 adults living... Read more

News Brief

November 1, 2004

The Sustainable Buildings Industry Council has announced the winners of its 2004 awards program. The jury included BuildingGreen’s Alex Wilson. More information is online at www.sbicouncil.org.

Best Sustainable Practice Awards were given to:

•The

Massachusetts Technology Collaborative for

Sustainable Policy and... Read more

News Brief

November 1, 2004

Americans spent a total of 3.5 billion hours waiting in traffic during 2002—about 46 hours per peak traveler—according to the 2004 Urban Mobility Report, published by the Texas Transportation Institute. “Congestion has grown everywhere, in areas of all sizes,” according to the report. Collectively, we wasted 5.7 billion gallons (216 billion... Read more

News Brief

November 1, 2004

The egg of a Forster’s tern, a fish-eating seabird common in the San Francisco Bay, has been found to have 63 parts per million (ppm) of toxic PBDE flame retardants (see

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Vol. 13, No. 6), the highest concentration ever found in any animal, according to a September 10, 2004

Los Angeles Times article. According to... Read more