BuildingGreen Report

Blog Post

February 20, 2009
In an online article on the U.S. Department of Energy's EnergySmart Hospitals, we compared that program to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's Energy Star for Healthcare program. Having looked at both programs, we suggested that, without benchmarking and reporting requirements, the EnergySmart Hospitals program was the less rigorous of the... Read more

Op-Ed

February 20, 2009

In a case that has baffled his family, friends, colleagues, and the police, Gregory Franta, FAIA, has mysteriously disappeared. He was last seen having dinner with his daughter on Sunday, February 8, in Denver; and was captured on a surveillance camera leaving a club several hours later. He was driving a 2006 white Honda Civic Hybrid, four-door... Read more

Blog Post

February 18, 2009

Despite the economic downturn and the trend toward smaller crowds at building trade shows, Efficiency Vermont's 2009 Better Buildings by Design Conference was a great success and actually increased attendance this year. The enthusiastic response is a tribute to the sustainable building community at large and to Efficiency Vermont, which put on... Read more

Blog Post

February 18, 2009
We've all had this conversation: is a huge single family green home really green? A new building in the desert? A man-made island in Dubai? The blog Green Building Elements has collected the 10 Dumbest Green Buildings on Earth, including a BP gas station, a golf lodge, a single-family skyscraper, and a car dealership. A green building is better... Read more

Blog Post

February 16, 2009
Turbines in Mount Equinox, Vermont.

Last week we reviewed the history of wind energy, including its use for pumping water and generating power. This week we'll take at look at the state of the art with wind power and what's ahead.

The growth of wind power over the past decade has been nothing short of spectacular. In ten years, from... Read more

Blog Post

February 10, 2009
There are still people on both sides of the PVC issue, but let's go ahead and assume that most green builders don't like the stuff — mostly because of its upstream and downstream environmental burdens. PVC taken in isolation from its birth and death enters murkier territory. There's a product available that decreases a building's heat loss, doesn... Read more

Blog Post

February 9, 2009
NOT FOR EVERY SITE. Wind power doesn't make sense everywhere. Fortunately this site is consistently breezy enough to generate the 6,000 kWh of electricity that David Pill's family demands each year. Here, a gin pole -- an old-fashioned but effective winch-and-mast system -- is used to hoist the wind turbine into position.

Over the past few... Read more

Blog Post

February 4, 2009
At the 2008 "Summer Camp" in the Adirondacks.Photo: Mike Cox The green building industry lost one of its pillars this week. Less than two years after being diagnosed with breast cancer in April 2007, Gail Lindsey, FAIA, of Wake Forest, North Carolina, passed away on February 2nd. She had been recovering from a third round of chemotherapy when a... Read more

Blog Post

February 3, 2009

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Blog Post

February 3, 2009
Over 18 years and more than 160 issues of Environmental Building News, I've written quite a few articles — I hesitate to think about how many — but out of all of those, I think I had more fun and learned more in writing my most recent than ever before. "Growing Food Locally: Integrating Agriculture into our Built Environment" examines... Read more

Blog Post

February 2, 2009

Last week I described why some environmentalists have shifted their position and now support nuclear power, and I described how we might be able to store nuclear waste more safely and cheaply than in the Yucca Mountain facility. So what's wrong with nuclear power? Why not move full-steam-ahead with this much more climate-friendly power... Read more

Op-Ed

January 30, 2009

There are a lot of problems with our existing food production system. Consider: the average mouthful of food has traveled 1,500 miles before reaching our plate, losing nutrition and flavor while consuming an incredible amount of energy. Agribusiness has created vast monocultures of grains, corn, and soybeans that, directly or indirectly deliver... Read more

News Analysis

January 29, 2009

The “Eco-Labeling Act of 2008” is far from becoming the law of the land, but U.S. Senator Dianne Feinstein is crafting federal legislation under that name to rein in the confusing proliferation of environmental product labels.

Feinstein, who may formally propose the bill during this session of Congress, is currently gathering ideas from... Read more

News Brief

January 29, 2009

Responding to growing international requirements for suppliers to document that their wood comes from legal sources, the American Hardwood Export Council (AHEC) released a report claiming to validate the legality of North American hardwood sources as a whole. While a trade association promoting hardwood exports might not be the most objective... Read more

News Brief

January 29, 2009

The American Society of Heating, Refrigerating, and Air-Conditioning Engineers (ASHRAE) has proposed six addenda to Standard 90.1-2007 that would expand its scope and change how lighting efficiencies are calculated.

One addendum would add operations and maintenance as well as renewable energy to the scope of the standard, which currently... Read more

News Analysis

January 29, 2009

GE Consumer and Industrial is seeking approval from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to use the hydrocarbon isobutane in household refrigerators, according to a recent report in

Appliance magazine. Isobutane is neither an ozone-depleting compound nor a greenhouse gas, which sets it apart from the HCFCs and HFCs used in... Read more

Feature

January 29, 2009

Eli Zabar’s bakery and market on East 91st Street in Manhattan seems like a classic New York market. On my half-dozen visits over as many years, I’ve reveled in the gorgeously displayed vegetables and fruits, the vast array of cheeses, and the wide assortment of breads and pastries baked next door. But Zabar’s market, the Vinegar Factory (... Read more

News Brief

January 29, 2009
U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC) co-founder David Gottfried has, not surprisingly, built a very green house. The 1,460 ft2 (136 m2) house in Oakland, California, has earned 106.5 points out of a possible 136 in USGBC’s LEED for Homes rating system, making it the highest-scoring project to date.

To achieve the rating, Gottfried renovated a... Read more

News Analysis

January 29, 2009
The Acadia low-temperature, air-source heat pump from Hallowell (see

EBN

Vol. 15, No. 12) was recently chosen to provide heating and cooling at 2,000 housing units at Fort Dix/McGuire Air Force Base in New Jersey. About 600 units are in operation now, with new homes being completed at a rate of 40 each month.

Jack Gafford,... Read more

News Brief

January 29, 2009

Recent research published in the journal

Psychological Science gives a boost to the

biophilia hypothesis, which suggests that humans have an innate affinity for nature and that we benefit from exposure to nature—even through images (see

EBN

Vol. 15, No. 7).

Subjects in a University of Michigan study were... Read more