Op-Ed
Last October’s issue of
EBN (
Vol. 12, No. 10) was another great one. My non-expert two cents on the filtration issue is that the best way to do HVAC in buildings (at least buildings other than single-family homes) is to separate space conditioning, which is an intermittent load, from ventilation, which is always present during... Read more
News Brief
Governor James E. McGreevey of New Jersey announced the adoption of
new stormwater-control regulations in January that are being hailed as the most comprehensive in the nation. The new rules establish a 300-foot (90 m) buffer around more than 6,000 stream miles (9,650 km) along high-quality waterways. They also establish a goal of... Read more
Feature
News Brief
“Renewable energy sources could provide the equivalent to today’s production of both thermal and nuclear power combined.” While such a claim might be expected from environmentalists, this conclusion came from the
Clean Air Renewable Energy Coalition, a unique alliance of Canadian corporations (including energy producers Shell Canada, BP... Read more
News Brief
The Inuit Circumpolar Conference (ICC), representing 155,000 Inuit people in Russia, Canada, Greenland, and Alaska, is planning a human-rights legal case against Arctic states—particularly the United States—for their
complicity in global climate change. “What is at stake here is the cultural survival of Inuit as a people,” said ICC... Read more
News Brief
In an appendix to the draft environmental impact statement for the
World Trade Center reconstruction project in lower Manhattan is a set of sustainable development guidelines that should help green the huge 16-acre (6.5 ha) development. Already, construction equipment on the site is using low-sulfur diesel fuel and high-performance... Read more
News Analysis
The California Division of the State Architect (DSA) has issued an “Acceptance Criteria Document” for zero-water consumption urinal fixtures that is helping to clear the way for nonflushing urinals in California schools and state-owned buildings. With this document, “DSA addresses those sections of the code that were controversial, and says... Read more
News Brief
The year 2003 tied 2002 as the
second-hottest year on record, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). All five of the hottest years on record (since record-keeping began in 1880) have now occurred since 1997. Details are available on NOAA’s Climate Data Center Web site, at www.ncdc.noaa.gov.
... Read more
News Brief
U.S. Department of Commerce Silver Medal for her work. Lippiatt is an economist in the Office of Applied Economics of the Building and Fire Research Laboratory at the National... Read more
News Analysis
EBN... Read more
News Brief
A study by leading global climate scientist Dr. James Hansen and Dr. Larissa Nazarenko of NASA’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies suggests that carbon black (soot) from the
burning of diesel, biomass, and other fuels may contribute more than was previously thought to global warming, especially in polar regions. Soot accumulation on... Read more
News Brief
by Mark Francis, 2003, Island Press. Paperback, 90 pages, $25.
Another book about Village Homes? I have to admit to being skeptical when I picked up this new title, the first in a series of place-based case studies from the Landscape Architecture Foundation. But
Village Homes: A Community by Design is a real gem, and it does... Read more
News Analysis
The Second Circuit Court of Appeals in New York City has rejected a Bush Administration plan to lower energy-efficiency standards for air-conditioners. The lawsuit,
Natural Resources Defense Council v. Abraham, was brought by NRDC, consumer groups, and attorneys general from ten states. Clinton Administration standards, which mandate... Read more
News Brief
Meanwhile, University of Georgia researchers have found that selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs)—including fluoxetine and other common
antidepressants—delay both development in fish and metamorphosis in frogs. The affected animals eventually caught up with their drug-free peers, “but we know that in water, timing is... Read more
Op-Ed
Thank you for continuing to be the most informative green building publication available today! Your October feature article, “Air Filtration in Buildings” (
Vol. 12, No. 10), was a wealth of information.
Proper use of ozone generators for cleaning indoor air is misunderstood and misrepresented in too many articles. As a healthy... Read more
News Brief
Cool Roof Rating Council (CRRC) has begun the aged-testing component of its product rating program. CRRC has been providing third-party verification of both initial solar reflectance and initial thermal emittance of roofing products since September 2002 (see
EBN
Vol. 12, No. 7), and this aged-testing component adds another... Read more
Feature
The first LEED v2 Platinum building in the U.S. is off-the-grid, treating its own wastewater and making its own electricity, despite being just ten minutes from downtown Los Angeles.
The Audubon Center at Debs Park outside Los Angeles has earned a Platinum rating under version 2 of the U.S. Green Building Council’s LEED® Rating System. When the certification was announced in December 2003, the Audubon Center became the first building in the U.S.—and the second in the world (see EBN Vol. 12, No. 12)—to achieve this... Read more
News Analysis
Building on the success of its EcoWorx® backing system, in early December Shaw president Julian Saul... Read more
News Brief
Holcim, Ltd. one of the world’s largest suppliers of cement, aggregates, concrete, and construction-related services, has established a
Foundation for Sustainable Construction, based in Zurich, Switzerland, to promote environmental quality and social responsibility while encouraging economic growth. A competition to recognize... Read more
Feature



