Product Review
castellated I-beams—essentially, regular I-beams with much... Read more
News Brief
When homebuilder Barbara Harwood stumbled across the quote for a new mechanical system for a grocery store owned by her husband, she knew that the loads were out of line. The quote called for a system... Read more
News Brief
In an exciting breakthrough for energy conservation measures in residential development, Roger Perry has announced that all homes in his Meadowmount development in Chapel Hill, North Carolina will be built to guidelines from the Alternative Energy Corporation (AEC). The project will contain 715 houses, and total of 1298 residential units. AEC’... Read more
Feature
News Analysis
Expanded polystyrene (EPS) manufacturers representing 70% of the EPS industry recently joined together in April 1995 to form a trade organization, the EPS Molders Association, to more effectively promote their products. According to the May 1996 issue of
Energy Design Update, this development should help solve one of the biggest... Read more
News Brief
Christine Hammer, editor.
To subscribe, send the message “subscribe” to greenclips@aol.com. No charge.
If you have an e-mail account and an interest in green building, you should subscribe to
Greenclips. Every two weeks, between six and ten one-paragraph summaries of articles, gleaned from over 60 different publications,... Read more
News Brief
The April 1996 issue of the well-regarded British publication
Green Building Digest reports that Malaysia—one of the world’s largest plywood exporters—now stamps all of its plywood with the label “Sustainable Timber” even though, according to the Malaysian government, the country will be a net timber importer by the end of the century... Read more
News Analysis
A newly formed organization is now developing standardized testing protocols for indoor air quality related products and materials. The Product Emissions Testing Lab (PETL) Network is bringing together representatives of academia, government, and industry to achieve consensus-based procedures and to certify laboratories to test products... Read more
Op-Ed
Now that we at
EBN have finally the caught up with the trends and have created our own website, we can slow down long enough to ask: Why are we doing this, anyway? Didn’t we have enough to do just publishing on paper? At least the courts have struck down Internet censorship, so we don’t have to worry about getting in trouble for... Read more
News Brief
John Wiley & Sons, Inc., New York, 1996. 445 pages, hardcover, $34.95.
A handful of individuals have played truly dramatic roles in improving the relationship between our built environment and the natural environment.Near the top of that list is Ian McHarg, a Scottish war hero who went on to found the landscape architecture program... Read more
News Brief
A one-square-foot sample of low-e glazing, representing the one billionth square foot produced, was recently presented to Christine Ervin, Assistant Secretary of the U.S. Department of Energy by Mike Koenig of Andersen Windows and Jim Larsen of Cardinal IG. The presentation was in recognition of ongoing support provided by DOE of window... Read more
Op-Ed
I’ve worked the last 25 years on developing parts of what is now called “Eco-design,” under the belief that healthier buildings, lower energy use, and less ecological impact were important. This was only to discover recently that all this time I was still looking at things in isolation rather in their ecological interconnectedness!
What I... Read moreNews Brief
Schuller Corporation, a publicly traded manufacturer of fiberglass insulation based in Denver, Colorado, announced on May 17 that it is acquiring NRG Barriers of Portland, Maine, one of the nation’s leading producers of polyisocyanurate foam insulation. Both Schuller and NRG have been leaders in improving the environmental characteristics of... Read more
News Brief
Nuclear proponents have often pointed to the low electricity prices in France as evidence that high reliance on nuclear power keeps electricity prices low. But by comparing
pre-tax electricity rates, that claim is dispelled. According to the May/June issue of
World Watch Magazine, the three European countries with the lowest pre... Read more
Feature
Since the late 1980s about two dozen ecological wastewater treatment plants have been built, ranging from small systems serving individual schools, to medium-sized municipal systems serving several thousand households, to waste treatment plants for industries designed to treat specialized waste-water flows.
Using the natural cycles of plant and animal life instead of chemicals and mechanical systems to process wastewater holds a great deal of attraction. Conventional sewage treatment systems already rely on bacteria to do much of the work, but these organisms perform very restricted functions within a system that is generally mechanistic.... Read more
Product Review
The Rastra system uses 100% recycled expanded polystyrene (EPS) foam, but still as high a carbon footprint as solid concrete of the same volume.
A plethora of stay-in-place insulating concrete form building systems have been introduced in the last decade. Among these is the Rastra system—a European technology that is now getting established in the western United States.
The Rastra system uses 100% recycled expanded polystyrene (EPS) foam, ground into small beads and mixed with... Read more
News Brief
The March 1996 issue of
Energy Design Update reports that fire tests at a laboratory in California have demonstrated that spray-applied cellulose insulation can be a more effective fire stop than conventional wood firestops in a 2x4 wall. The testing was done as part of an effort to gain Uniform Building Code (UBC) approval for the... Read more
Op-Ed
As always, your dossier on windows was very informative. Below are a few other points to look for.
Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. (CMHC) has found that plants and some hypersensitive people react adversely to the fact that the sun’s balanced, full-spectrum of colors is filtered by low-e glazing. That’s why some healthy-home designers only... Read moreNews Brief
A hotly contested contract to provide green design services for a 200,000 ft2 (18,000 m2) science building at Middlebury College in Middlebury, Vermont has gone to a team led by
EBN Advisory Board member Bob Berkebile of BNIM Architects in Kansas City. This green team includes engineers Greg Allen and Marc Rosenbaum, another
EBN... Read more
News Brief
by Guy Sternberg and Jim Wilson. Chapters Publishing, Ltd., Shelburne, Vermont, 1995. 288 pages; paperback $24.95.
Our accolades for this book cannot be overstated. Not only is this probably the most attractive book we have seen on the use of trees for landscaping, but it clearly reviews environmental considerations relating to the use of... Read more




