BuildingGreen Report

Blog Post

April 13, 2010
For the last several weeks I've been describing a number of common myths about green building. This week I'll address the myth that green homes are ugly--that incorporating solar and other green features somehow compromises aesthetics.

I was active in the solar energy movement back in the late 1970s and early '80s, when, indeed, a whole lot of... Read more

Blog Post

April 7, 2010

All right, I'll admit it. The fact that the Netherlands-based revolving-door manufacturer Boon Edam has a model that uses human power to generate electricity is mostly a gimmick. By entering or leaving through the NRG+ Tourniket, a generator built into the revolving door mechanism powers three LED spotlights in the ceiling of the door.

... Read more

Blog Post

April 6, 2010
The last several weeks I've written about a number of common myths of green building. (Last's week's myth: solar panels are the best way to green a home.) Here's another: that the energy-conservation features and products we install are enough to ensure that our houses will be top energy performers. The starting point in greening a home should... Read more

Blog Post

April 2, 2010
Geoengineering. That's what they're calling some of the more high-tech proposals for solving the climate crisis. Geoengineering strategies all involve intentional manipulation of the earth's climate in order to offset the effects of anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions--for example, installing orbital mirrors in space, artificially "enhancing"... Read more

Blog Post

April 1, 2010
I've been following Sage Electrochromics for a long time. In 2006, BuildingGreen named SageGlass one of our Top-10 Green Building Products. It was the first practical, durable dynamic glazing that worked in exterior façade applications. This week, the company rolled out a new, much-higher-performance product.

By way of context, most glazing is... Read more

Blog Post

April 1, 2010
An article in the UK version of Wired talks about a design for a skyscraper that would collect water in much the way plants do. The skin of the building collects rainwater, guiding it to storage cisterns below ground. It could then be used for toilets, irrigation, clothes washing, and other uses for which potable water is not required.... Read more

Blog Post

March 31, 2010

Our April EBN feature article--"Passive House Arrives in North America: Could it Revolutionize the Way We Build?"--went online today. This was a fun article to research and write, because it put me in touch with my low-energy building roots. Until digging into the history of Wolfgang Feist's German Passivhaus standard, I hadn't realized that... Read more

Blog Post

March 30, 2010

The last several weeks I've written about common myths of green building: that it has to cost more to build green, that green building is mostly about materials, that green products don't work as well as conventional products, and that it's hard to find green products. This week I'll cover the myth that adding solar panels is the best way to... Read more

Blog Post

March 25, 2010

InPro Corporation was founded in 1979 as Institutional Products Corporation (IPC). Originally a distributor of high-impact door and wall-protection products for the healthcare industry, IPC began its own manufacturing in 1986, changed its name to InPro Corporation in 1995 (cleverly retaining IPC), and today is one of the leading producers of a... Read more

Blog Post

March 23, 2010
If you thought making substantive change by 2030 was a challenge, how about by 2014? A new initiative launched last week and getting spread around the Internet today, 'fouryears.go' says "There is still time to act, but no time to waste." Started by Pachamama Alliance and Wieden+Kennedy--the ad agency behind Nike's 'just do it' (they're... Read more

Blog Post

March 23, 2010

The last few weeks I've written about common myths of green building: that it has to cost more to build green, that green building is mostly about materials, and that green products don't work as well as conventional products. This week I'll cover the myth that green building products are hard to find.

When I first started writing about... Read more

Blog Post

March 22, 2010
What are the environmental priorities in your region? How can you find out?

As you may know, USGBC responded to the longstanding call for regionalization of LEED by establishing Regional Priority Credit 1 (RPc1) in its LEED 2009 family of rating systems (NC, CS, CI, Schools, EBOM).

Regional priority credits are identified by USGBC... Read more

Blog Post

March 19, 2010
Years ago a friend and I borrowed my mother's minivan, left our small college, and drove west in search of the Great American Wilderness. For months we steered clear of cities in favor of National Parks and Forests, but as we passed through the Sierras we couldn't help but notice how close Death Valley is to that other American extreme: Las Vegas... Read more

Blog Post

March 18, 2010
Our next feature article for Environmental Building News is on the Passive House standard for ultra-low-energy buildings--a standard that originated about 20 years ago in Germany. Excitement about Passive House in North America is resulting in some really cool products being introduced from Europe. One of those is the Zehnder line of heat-... Read more

Blog Post

March 17, 2010
If you've been following this blog for a while, you know that I wrote about urine-separating toilets last year. You'll also know that I'm rather enamored of the image at right. So you can imagine how gleeful I was when I discovered I had another reason to use it! It turns out researchers in Europe have found that people are not at all grossed... Read more

Blog Post

March 16, 2010
The last couple weeks I've written about two of the common myths of green building: that it has to cost more to build green and that green building is mostly about materials. This week I'll cover another myth: that green building products don't perform as well as conventional products.

A lot of people still point to products like early water-... Read more

Blog Post

March 16, 2010

Ever since the premier of USGBC's two-day REGREEN workshop in Phoenix, AZ at Greenbuild last November, Annette, Rob, and I have been gearing up for a slew of green remodeling workshops across the country -- the REGREEN Roadshow. The REGREEN workshops are a lot of fun to teach (and take) for two reasons: one, the blend of builder/remodeler with... Read more

Blog Post

March 15, 2010

The following is a video that we recorded at our booth at the 2009 Greenbuild conference, when we transformed BuildingGreen's booth into the "Ask LEEDuser" experience, including talks on specific credits from LEEDuser's "guest experts"--the top LEED minds on specific LEED credits.

Here, Joshua Radoff of YRG sustainability reviews some... Read more

Blog Post

March 10, 2010

Last week I wrote about one of the common myths of green building: that it has to cost more to build green. This week, I'll tackle another myth: that green building is mostly about materials.

This isn't quite as significant a misconception as it was a few years ago, but there are still a lot of people who think green building is largely... Read more

Blog Post

March 10, 2010
Go figure I'd finish a feature article (Chemistry for Designers: Understanding Hazards in Building Products) saying there's no certification in the USA for products that are hazard-free and immediately a label gets launched. That's ok, I have no complaints with things moving fast in this field. I haven't dug into the details enough to vouch for... Read more