BuildingGreen Report

News Brief

May 1, 1994
Product Directories:

Two of the Best Just Got a Whole Lot Better

Guide to Resource Efficient Building Elements, 4th Edition, 1994, from the Center for Resourceful Building Technology, P.O. Box 3866, Missoula, MT 59806; 406/549-7678. 94 pages, soft-cover, $25.The Center for Resourceful Building Technology (CRBT) did a superb job in... Read more

Feature

This article takes a detailed look at cooling load avoidance in residential and commercial buildings.

May 1, 1994

Cooling our homes and commercial buildings is becoming a more and more significant environmental concern. Both the total amount of energy we expend for cooling and the fraction of peak electricity use for cooling are on the rise. At the same time, our ability to reduce cooling loads in buildings is improving. We have new materials and... Read more

Explainer

A pioneer in nutrient recovery from human waste

May 1, 1994

The new Wampanoag Tribal Headquarters has implemented a remarkable array of environmentally sound features. The building requires very little operating energy, treats all human waste and wastewater as a resource, utilizes many recycled-content and resource-efficient materials, minimizes site impact and offers a comfortable and healthy indoor... Read more

Feature

March 1, 1994
Conventional in-ground wastewater disposal systems cannot be counted on to adequately protect groundwater. It surprises many people to learn that even a properly functioning septic system built to code is designed to introduce pollutants into the soil and—ultimately—the groundwater. Worse, a large number of the roughly 22 million in-ground... Read more

News Brief

March 1, 1994
Detailed Environmental Assessments of Structural Building Materials

Building Materials in the Context of Sustainable Development, nine research reports available from Forintek Canada Corp., 800 Montreal Road, Ottawa, ON K1G 3Z5, Canada; 613/744-0963, 613/744-0903 (fax). Complete sets: CDN$600 for universities and nonprofits, CDN$900 for... Read more

Explainer

March 1, 1994
Sand Barrier Termite Control

We spend more than $1 billion per year in the United States protecting our buildings from termites and repairing termite damage. Until a few years ago, the highly toxic chlordane was the chemical of choice for termite protection. It was effective at killing termites and maintained its potency for several decades.... Read more

Op-Ed

March 1, 1994
Perspective

Our lead article in this issue takes a look at on-site wastewater treatment. Several alternative approaches that provide better groundwater protection are discussed. But our quest for improved wastewater treatment, especially on sites with poor soils, raises an important concern. If we can design self-contained wastewater treatment... Read more

News Brief

March 1, 1994

The City of New York has created an Inter-Agency Environmentally Sound Building Task Force to develop, encourage, and coordinate ideas for introducing environmentally sound building into the municipal building program. The City is currently soliciting information from other municipalities, private industry, and other countries on applied... Read more

News Analysis

March 1, 1994
New Building Assessment Program Unveiled in British Columbia

After years of development, the Building Environmental Performance Assessment Criteria (BEPAC) program is up and running. The system is designed as a voluntary rating program for commercial and institutional buildings, in which building owners can choose to have their property... Read more

News Brief

March 1, 1994

The National Appropriate Technology Assistance Service (NATAS), operated by the National Center for Appropriate Technology since 1984, has ceased operations. NATAS had offered toll-free technical assistance on issues relating to renewable energy and energy efficiency. Most information services provided by NATAS will now be available from... Read more

News Analysis

March 1, 1994
New Generation of Compact Fluorescent Lamps

Specifications of New Compact Fluorescent Lamps

1. Total Harmonic Distortion

2. Osram and Sylvania merged in 1993

3. Reflector style

4. Panasonic lamps have single tube with double fold and are enclosed in white glass bulb. Lamps available in... Read more

News Brief

March 1, 1994

Foamed insulation from coal fly-ash, being developed by Henry Sperber of Abiff Manufacturing, recently got a boost in the form of a DOE grant. Sperber is the inventor of the Blow-in-Blanket and Fiberiffic insulation systems. The product has interesting possibilities as a low-cost, foamed-in-place insulation made from industrial waste. It is... Read more

Product Review

March 1, 1994
Loose-Fill Insulation

from Batt Scraps

Insulation contractors who work with batts have to deal with disposing of cut-offs and waste pieces of insulation from every job. Remodelers take volumes of perfectly good batt insulation to the dump, not only wasting all that material, but also paying a lot in tipping fees.

These issues... Read more

News Brief

March 1, 1994
New Product Directory Available on Diskette

from The Stafford Architects, 1916 Pike Place #705, Seattle, WA 98101-1056; 206/682-4042, 206/447-1670 (fax). Runs on common spreadsheet or database software on Mac or DOS-based PCs. $45, $69 with semi-annual update. Multi-user licenses slightly higher.

There’s a lot of information on this... Read more

Op-Ed

March 1, 1994
On the Virtues of Clay Pipe

Your article titled “Should We Phase Out PVC?” was a breath of fresh air. You assumed an impartial role and presented the available information without misrepresentation, innuendo or distortion. The fact that PVC can be hazardous during its manufacture and disposal should be of concern to your readers.

... Read more

News Brief

March 1, 1994

Dow Plastics has just introduced three new plastic resins, one of which is being offered as an alternative to flexible PVC. The Affinity SM 1250 resin is reportedly a response to pressure to eliminate PVC from medical applications in Europe, and may also be used to make wire and cable sheathing for construction.

News Analysis

March 1, 1994
New Research to Promote Recycled-Content

Building Materials

The Forest Products Laboratory (FPL), largest research lab of the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Forest Service, has announced a plan to promote increased use of recycled wood fiber in a broad range of housing applications. The project’s stated goal is to develop technologies... Read more

Feature

March 1, 1994
Are the electromagnetic fields in and around our buildings causing cancer? Is this the next big indoor health issue, or is it just a passing whimsy—interesting but insignificant? What should we as designers and builders be doing about these fields? There are still many more questions than answers about these fields and their possible health... Read more

News Brief

March 1, 1994
Linking Owner-Builders

with Architects

by John Connell. 1993, Warner Books, New York. 400 pages, hardcover, $35.00.

With

Homing Instinct, Connell has contributed the latest in a tradition of how-to books for owner-builders. Following in the footsteps of old classics like

From the Ground Up and

Building... Read more

News Brief

March 1, 1994

Adobe/Solar Associates, purveyor of top-notch workshops on passive solar and adobe construction since 1991, has just introduced a free newsletter,

The Mudslinger. ASA’s three-day 1994 workshops are scheduled for May and October in Santa Fe, and April and October in Phoenix. For information, contact Adobe/Solar Associates, 847 E. Palace... Read more