OVERVIEW
Is wood a sustainable material? It depends: a table made from reclaimed wood has a much smaller environmental footprint than one sourced from a monoculture plantation that replaced a rainforest.
Defining responsible material sourcing—and then finding responsibly sourced products—is complicated. Here you will find in-depth resources that detail the benefits and challenges of using biobased materials, reclaimed wood, fly ash, and other materials. Our resources also detail which companies and industries are ahead of the curve in offering responsible choices.
What about the materials you don’t use? Using less is always a good idea—as long as that doesn’t compromise performance.
Doing more with less takes knowledge and attention: it’s about investing in human resources instead of wasting natural resources. And since our small planet has more humans every day, we’re not likely to run out of them anytime soon. Durability, efficient structural systems, and repairing and retrofitting rather than replacing are all key strategies to consider.
IN-DEPTH
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Building Products Matter Even More Than We Thought
Op-Ed
Operational energy use is critical, but materials might be an even bigger part of the solution to climate change and other pressing environmental issues.
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FSC, LEED, and the Price of Perfectionism
Op-Ed
A hard line against industry-sponsored alternatives to FSC certification in the past may have unfortunate outcomes for the world’s forests.
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Market-Rate Net-Zero-Carbon Design Emerges from Exercise
Case Study
As an exercise, HOK designed a market rate, net-zero-carbon office building in St. Louis. They calculated a payback period for added green features of 12 years.
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EBN's Position on Fly Ash
Op-Ed
EBN is concerned about heavy metals leaching from products made with fly ash, and thinks these products should only be used if they reduce greenhouse gas emissions elsewhere or if the risk of leaching is very low.
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Building on Aldo Leopold's Legacy: Aldo Leopold Legacy Center, Baraboo, Wisconsin
Case Study
The Aldo Leopold Foundation aims to uphold the land ethic in its new headquarters.
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Indigenous Cradle to Cradle
Op-Ed
Reader Bruce King questions the focus of the Cradle to Cradle product certification program on synthetic materials.
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Meeting Your Challenge
Op-Ed
Sarnafil US, Inc. meets EBN's challenge to recycle its old roofs as well as production waste and scrap.
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Why the USGBC Should Change LEED's Position on Wood
Op-Ed
Alex Wilson, who wrote a white paper for the USGBC recommending changes to the LEED Rating System relative to wood and biobased credits, explains why the changes make sense from an environmental standpoint.