News Brief
The e-mail discussion group on green building, cosponsored by
EBN, Iris Communications, and CREST, has been going strong since September 1996. The number of participants has been surprisingly stable at just over 500, including subscribers to the digest version, which compiles all the day’s posts into one long... Read more
News Analysis
A June 30, 1999 workshop on green building marked the last in a long series of measures taken by the City of Long Beach, California to fulfill its part of an agreement with environmentalists over a dispute about use of tropical wood. This process began when environmental activists threatened... Read more
News Brief
A
Texas bill on electric utility restructuring, signed into law by Governor George W. Bush on June 18, mandates the development of renewable electric power generation. The law requires a total of 2,000 megawatts (MW) of new power production from renewables by 2009, with incremental levels specified by 2003, 2005, and 2007.... Read more
Op-Ed
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Updated E Build Library™ CD Helps Track Down Green Building Products An updated and expanded version 3.0 of the popular E Build Library CD-... Read moreNews Brief
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Newsbriefs The Smithsonian Institution has opened an outdoor exhibit showing offthe technology, science, and art of solar power. The... Read more
News Analysis
Agriboard Industries, L.C., producer of stressed-skin panels with a compressed straw core and OSB skins (see
EBN
Vol. 4, No. 3 and
Vol. 7, No. 4), has ceased production and closed its offices due to financial difficulties. The company had been expecting $8.5 million in additional financing from the... Read more
News Brief
Lots of little glitches keep popping up during
testing for Y2K preparedness. One recent glitch was not so little. In the San Fernando Valley of California, 4 million gallons (15 million l) of raw sewage were spilled onto a 10-acre (4 ha) section of the Sepulveda Dam Recreation Area when a gate controlling sewage transfer from a main... Read more
News Brief
The
Adam Joseph Lewis Center for Environmental Studies at Oberlin College, designed by William McDonough + Partners, has received the 1999 American Architecture Award of the Chicago Atheneum Museum of Architecture. The 13,500 ft2 (1,250 m2) building is now nearing completion.
News Brief
A last-minute deal
saved over 100 community gardens in New York City from being auctioned off to developers in May. The City had been planning to sell the lots for development, claiming that they were unused and unwanted, in spite of the fact that some have been thriving gardens for decades. The deal involved sales of the... Read more
News Brief
On June 28, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency issued
a new rule regarding the disposal of fluorescent lamps. Under the new rule, fluorescent lamps will be treated as “universal waste,” a designation that will reduce the regulatory burden on businesses that generate such wastes. EPA issued the first universal waste rule in 1995 to... Read more
News Brief
Four projects were honored in the Boston Society of Architects’ 1999 Sustainable Design Awards, cosponsored by the Manhattan chapter of The American Institute of Architects. A forum featuring jurors on these winning projects is scheduled for November 17 at the Build Boston Conference.
Honor Awards went to... Read more
Product Review
EBN delayed writing about this new product until we could show actual installations and interview... Read more
News Brief
by the City of New York Department of Design and Construction, in collaboration with the Trust for Public Space, April 1999. Order from City Store by calling 212/669-8246. Available (in August) online at:
www.ci.nyc.ny.us/buildnyc/. Spiral-bound, 144 pages, $25.
New York City’s newHigh Performance Building Guidelines is... Read more
News Brief
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AIA/Portland’s 1999 Architecture + Energy Awards, sponsored by the Northwest Energy Efficiency Alliance, recently recognized four buildings.
... Read more
News Brief
Worldwide sales of
compact fluorescent lamps (CFLs) are increasing. According to the World Resources Institute report
Vital Signs, CFL sales increased 24% during 1997—to 356 million. CFL sales are increasing 3% to 5% per year, though they still only represent 1⁄28 the sales volume of incandescent lamps. However, due to the... Read more
News Analysis
On July 3, 1999 the City of San Francisco became one of the nation’s first municipalities to have a green building ordinance on the books for City-owned projects. The additions to the San Francisco Municipal Code, known as the Resource Efficient Building Ordinance, consists of two... Read more
News Brief
On June 21, U.S. Energy Secretary Bill Richardson announced a goal of meeting 5% of the nation’s electricity needs with
wind energy by 2020. The target calls for 5,000 MW of wind power capacity to be installed by 2005, and 10,000 MW to be installed by 2010. “Wind energy has been the fastest growing source of energy in the world during... Read more
News Brief
by David Del Porto and Carol Steinfeld, 1999.
The Center for Ecological Pollution Prevention,
PO Box 1330, Concord, MA 01742;
www.ecological-engineering.com.
Softcover, 234 pages, $29.95
The authors ofThe Composting Toilet System Book set out to accomplish a very challenging task: to present in an... Read more
News Brief
On March 1,
Jamison Ervin left her position as coordinator of the U.S. Initiative of the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC). Jamie began work with FSC in 1992, even before the association was formally founded, and she helped to shepherd FSC through this complex formative process. Jamie plans to complete a doctorate in natural resource... Read more
News Analysis
Two new reports on common plasticizers used in polyvinyl chloride (PVC) products offer very different conclusions about the safety of these chemicals. A panel of scientists and physicians convened by the American Council on Science and Health (ACSH) and led by former U.S. Surgeon General C.... Read more


