March 2008

A Deeper Shade of Green

When the National Association of Home Builders rolls out its modified green building standards, water efficiency and conservation will top the list.

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By Carol Brzozowski

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On February 15, 2008, the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) announced that its new Green Building Standard is set for approval by the American National Standards Institute (ANSI) and will be ready for publication by mid spring of this year. The public comment period for the new standards closed on February 4, and committee members will have until March 4 to vote. In comparison to the US Green Building Council’s Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) for Homes green building standards—the NAHB standards will provide similar levels of environmentally conscious products and practices with more flexibility built in for builders and homeowners, according to NAHB executives.

Water efficiency and conservation is one of seven standards that also includes lot preparation and design; resource efficiency; energy efficiency; occupancy comfort and indoor environmental quality; and operation, maintenance, and homeowner education. Additional points can be gained from any of the categories.

“Some of this is really complicated,” says Bob Jones, vice-president and secretary of the NAHB, and president-elect for 2010. “Many people in our industry think you just become a green builder, and that’s not the case at all—there’s a lot of detail and depth in all the particular facets.” Jones also owns Robert R. Jones Homes, in Bloomfield Hills, MI.

In developing the standards, the NAHB has worked with the International Code Commission and ANSI. The public was given a commentary period on the proposed standards. “We wanted to be sure we weren’t going to actuate something called a ‘standard’ that didn’t have the consensus of both ANSI and NAHB, because it really offers standing in terms that these standards are real, not self-promoted by NAHB,” says Jones.

Until now, NAHB has advocated guidelines through green-building practices, using them as a springboard for the draft of the standards. “Guidelines were developed by the NAHB over past years, but they still were guidelines,” says Jones.

When it comes to the NAHB standards, the organization’s membership “doesn’t subscribe to the typical mandatory type of standards attached to a point system,” he adds. “Our standards will have a point system, but we wanted to be a voluntary system in terms of what people can select. A key element is affordability. People buying their first home have every right to want a level of green building in their home, and, by making the point system voluntary, they can select the level of green they want [it] to be.”

The basic distinction between NAHB and LEED, is that LEED standards are mandatory to achieve points, says Jones. NAHB levels will be bronze, silver, gold, and emerald—the highest level of ‘green’ attainment. 

If approved, water efficiency standards will address issues inside and outside of homes, with respect to both products and design. “From a design perspective, it’s really about water savings, but, it’s also really about hot water in terms of the design component inside the house,” notes Jones.

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Such designs could include:

  • Locating baths near each other for shorter pipe runs.
  • The use of a demand-controlled hot water loop-type system.
  • Point-of-use hot water through tankless water heaters.
  • Solar heat-assisted hot water systems, which Jones says will be a climate-specific regional practice.

“We did do a little exploration with tankless water heaters,” says Jones. “You’d have to use the small ones in many different locations within a home. There is one that is sized for a house, which costs about $1,200 for use in a 2-1/2 bath modest-sized home. There’s quite a bit of piping that takes place, because there is some similarity in terms of piping to a hot water heater, even though it is a tankless heater.” Next Page >

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