BuildingGreen Report

News Brief

November 1, 1993
Guiding Principles of Sustainable Design

by National Park Service. September 1993. 118 pages. Limited copies available from the Denver Service Center, National Park Service, P.O. Box 25287, Denver, CO 80225; 303/969-2100. (No charge while initial printing lasts; then copies will be available from the Government Printing Office.)

... Read more

News Analysis

November 1, 1993
R-2000 Requirements to Include Non-Energy Factors

The Canadian R-2000 energy-efficient homes program is revising and broadening its standards. The Technical Research Committee of the Canadian Home Builders’ Association has made its recommendations to Energy, Mines and Resources Canada (EMR), the government body that administers R-2000. The... Read more

Product Review

November 1, 1993

The Cycle II™ line from the Major Paint Company (the manufacturing arm of Standard Brands Paint Co.) contains at least 12% recycled paint collected from consumers and 38% in-house waste from washing machinery. The remaining 50% is virgin material. Cycle II is available in flat, semi-gloss, and primer formulations in about a dozen colors ranging... Read more

News Brief

November 1, 1993
Interior Concerns

Resource Guide

Victoria Schomer, ASID, editor. PO Box 2386, Mill Valley, CA 94942. Spiral-bound, 230 pages. $40.

If you’ve ever wanted to look through the notebooks of an experienced “green” interior designer, this is your chance. Victoria Schomer has been compiling information on healthy building materials for... Read more

Product Review

November 1, 1993
Green Paint is made by a small company specializing in recycled paint. The Green Paint line is made of at least 90% post-consumer product, with quality and colors controlled through careful sorting of the incoming material (unused paint is delivered to the company in its original containers). The line includes six products:

•urethane-reinforced... Read more

News Brief

November 1, 1993
News Briefs

A competition for designs that elegantly integrate photovoltaics into individual buildings and into the urban environment is being cosponsored by the International Energy Agency and the Netherlands Agency for Energy and the Environment. Prizes will be awarded in three categories: large-scale application in an urban area; single... Read more

Feature

The energy used for space heating and cooling in residential buildings produces 420 million tons of carbon dioxide per year and 8.9 million tons of atmospheric pollutants.

November 1, 1993

Energy use is arguably the most significant environmental impact of buildings. Residential and commercial buildings in the U.S. use about 29 quads (quadrillion Btus) of energy each year, 35% of total energy consumption. That energy used for space heating and cooling in residential buildings (just over 7 quads per year) produces 420 million tons... Read more

News Brief

September 1, 1993
Construction Materials Recycling Guidebook

Pamela Winthrop Lauer, project director. 1993. Free. 36 pages. Order from: Metropolitan Council, Attn: Data Center, Mears Park Center, 230 E. Fifth St., St. Paul, MN 55101; 612/291-8140.

Although designed for use by contractors in the Twin Cities area of Minnesota, this guidebook has lots of... Read more

Op-Ed

September 1, 1993

I read your editorial in the recent issue [July/August ‘93] with great interest, since we too are constantly struggling to provide good information at reasonable cost, yet keep the whole operation afloat financially. It’s not easy.

I think EBN is an excellent publication. Sure it would be nice if the price were lower (who wouldn’t like to... Read more

News Analysis

September 1, 1993
Whiter Roofs Mean Lower Cooling Bills

A new study by the Florida Solar Energy Center (FSEC) demonstrates that high-reflectivity coatings can dramatically reduce air conditioning costs. Two houses—one with a pitched asphalt-shingle roof and R-11 attic insulation, and the other with a flat tar-paper roof and no insulation—were used in the... Read more

Product Review

September 1, 1993
Gridcore

Lightweight, high-strength panels made entirely from recycled fibers will become available this fall for use in trade show displays. Robert Noble of Gridcore Systems International (GSI) has chosen that market as the starting place for a panel system that may eventually revolutionize a whole range of industries, including low-cost... Read more

News Brief

September 1, 1993
Environmental by Design - Volume I: Interiors

by Kim Leclair and David Rousseau. 1992, Hartley & Marks, Inc., 79 Tyee Dr., Point Roberts, WA 98281. $19.95 U.S.; $24.95 Canada.

With the publication of

Environmental by Design, the field of environmentally sustainable design and construction took a significant step forward.... Read more

News Brief

September 1, 1993

As reported in a Congressional hearing in June, the EPA has so far been unable to duplicate the results of carpet toxicity studies done by Anderson Labs of Dedham, Massachusetts (see EBN

Vol. 2, No. 2, “Mouse-Killing Carpets”). For reasons that remain unclear, the EPA used different test procedures that included percolating the exposed... Read more

Product Review

September 1, 1993
Termite-proof Below-grade Insulation

Exterior, below-grade foundation insulation has fallen into disfavor in some areas because it provides termites with a protected pathway into the structure. The problem is so serious that some termite prevention companies are refusing to treat houses with exterior foundation insulation, and code officials... Read more

News Brief

September 1, 1993

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has launched IAQ INFO, the Indoor Air Quality Information Clearinghouse. IAQ INFO has specialists who can provide information on a wide range of issues relating to indoor air quality: pollutant sources, health effects, testing, control measures, and relevant standards/guidelines. Along with answering... Read more

Feature

September 1, 1993
In the wake of this summer’s devastating floods in the Midwest, more and more people are recog-nizing that levees and dams may not be the only way—or even the best way—to deal with floods. Regardless of the measures taken, most floodplains will ultimately flood, and we might do better to work with this natural cycle—and minimize damages—than to... Read more

Op-Ed

September 1, 1993
Home Depot on

Lumber Certification

My compliments to you for an excellent publication. I just received my first issue and am glad I subscribed.

I’m not sure how you interpreted my comments from the Sustainable Forest Products Conference, but The Home Depot is not for, but against, a simple stamp or seal. We fully support the SCS... Read more

News Brief

September 1, 1993

The Forest Information Resource System (FORIS), a database on the world’s timber resources, will be released by Tree Talk in November 1993. FORIS is intended to provide wood users with detailed information that will encourage the use of lesser-known and environmentally friendly species. Physical properties of each species, appropriate uses,... Read more

News Analysis

September 1, 1993
New White House Leadership on Wetlands

On August 24 the Clinton Administration announced a policy for the nation’s wetlands that aims to end years of confusion and infighting among various federal agencies with overlapping jurisdictions. Initial reaction to the plan from all sides was mixed, although most people are waiting to see how things... Read more

Op-Ed

September 1, 1993
A Building Expert's Comments

Some thoughts on the May/June ‘93 issue:

On More Efficient Wood Use (p. 18):

We must conduct a massive educational campaign to wean the majority of builders and building inspectors (architects, too) away from their obsession with what I label 11th commandment framing. A recent poll by the NAHB shows 67... Read more