News Brief
The President’s Council on Sustainable Development and President Clinton have selected 15 recipients of Presidential Honors Awards, exemplifying successful integration of economic viability, environmental integrity, and social well-being. Award winners in the building, design, and building products fields include:
•Architect William... Read moreNews Brief
Dutch publishers of a simplified guidebook for choosing environmentally preferable materials are being sued for suggesting that zinc roofing be avoided. An English translation of the book has just been published in the U.K. under the title
Handbook of Sustainable Building (James & James Ltd., March 1996), but will not be distributed... Read more
News Analysis
Manufacturers argue that, properly installed and operated, these heaters pose no threat, but the many warnings and cautions in the installation manuals suggest that... Read more
News 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 Analysis
Expanding on its four-year-old carpet testing program (see
EBN
Vol. 3, No. 6), the Carpet and Rug Institute (CRI) has launched a similar program to test emissions from carpet adhesives. Initiated on March 31, 1996, the new program will test samples of participating product lines quarterly. Products that meet program guidelines... 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 moreNews Brief
The Minnesota legislature is considering a statewide carbon tax of $50 per ton on all fuels and electricity consumed in the state, according to the 8 March 1996
Global Environmental Change Report. The law, which is given little chance of passage this year, would tax nuclear-generated electricity but exempt renewable energy sources. The... Read more
Op-Ed
We were pleased
Environmental Building News (EBN) gave a positive review to the American Forest & Paper Association’s (AF&PA)
National Wood Recycling Directory but somewhat disappointed with your opinion of our industry’s recycling efforts.
It’s misleading to describe AF&PA as “an organization that is primarily... Read moreFeature
Are our buildings making us sick? Yes, say an increasing number of indoor air quality specialists in government agencies, academia, and the emerging industry working to solve these problems. By some estimates, direct medical costs associated with IAQ problems in the United States are as high as $15 billion per year, with indirect costs of $60... Read more
Product Review
It was discovered in 1914 in Sweden that adding aluminum powder to cement, lime, water, and finely ground sand caused the mixture to expand dramatically. The Swedes allowed this “foamed” concrete to harden in a mold, and then they cured it in a pressurized steam chamber—an
autoclave.
Autoclaved aerated concrete (AAC, also called... Read moreNews Brief
Joseph Demkin, editor. The American Institute of Architects. Published annually by John Wiley & Sons, 1996. Three-ring-bound. $150 + $2.50 for handling. Call 800/225-5945 to order.
The newEnvironmental Resource Guide (ERG) uses an effective combination of text and graphics to convey the environmental implications of building... Read more
News Brief
Willammette Industries, Inc. has just retooled a particleboard mill in Eugene, Oregon to produce a higher-quality medium-density fiberboard (MDF) using at least 50% recycled wood. The mill will use wood waste from construction sites, pallets, and packing crates.
News Analysis
Op-Ed
You’re on the cutting edge again! We’ve been grumbling for the last couple of years about “Eco” homes carved out of the forest whose residents are forced to drive cars every day. Yours is the first article I’ve seen in green building literature that tackles transportation. Congratulations.
Paul HortonEnergy Outreach Center
Olympia... Read more
News Brief
100 pages; $5.00 covers postage & handling. Available from the American Forest & Paper Association, 1111 19th Street, NW, Suite 800, Washington, DC 20036.
This new, publication provides useful—though somewhat limited—information on where to recycle wood products. Organized on a state-by-state basis, the directory includes about 600... Read moreNews Brief
Wood and paper recycling could be used to achieve 10-20% of the U.S. carbon reduction goal, according to scientists at the USDA Forest Products Laboratory in Madison, Wisconsin. Recycling wood and paper reduces net carbon emissions by reducing timber harvesting, which in turn increases the amount of carbon sequestered by living trees, and by... Read more
News Analysis
Builders and designers committed to energy- and resource-efficient construction strategies have long struggled with building codes that mandate conventional practice, even when alternatives might be more sensible. A new addition to the Lake County, Illinois building code offers one solution to this problem—in a complete, take-it-or-leave-it... Read more
Op-Ed
The January 22nd issue of
Newsweek—with a cover story suggesting that global warming might be responsible for the season’s intense blizzards—arrived about the same time as a letter from my father-in-law. “So much for global warming,” he noted with a jab, in response to the harsh weather we were enduring.
If you look hard enough, you... Read moreNews Brief
is cosponsor of the upcoming conference Use of Recycled Wood and Paper in Building Applications, which will be held on September 9-11, 1996 in Madison, Wisconsin. The conference should be the best forum to date for the exchange of information relating to use of recycled wood and paper in building applications. For information, see the... Read more
News Brief
William McDonough Architects, of Charlottesville, Virginia was awarded a contract for design of a new environmental studies building at Oberlin College with extensive green design goals.




