November-December 2007

Green Certified

In the $12 billion-a-year “green building” industry, a seal of approval can be obtained when a project includes water efficient landscaping, innovative wastewater technologies, and water-use reduction fixtures.

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By Carol Brzozowski

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Other efforts ensued. In 1991, Austin, TX, created the Austin Green Building Program, which in 1992 was named one of the 10 most innovative government environmental programs worldwide by the Rio Earth Summit. As the decade unfolded, the sustainable building movement snowballed through the creation of various “green building” organizations. The apex came in 1993 when then-President Bill Clinton announced plans to “green” the White House to provide a role model in efficiency and waste reduction. Also in 1993, the USGBC began. The national effort spawned regional efforts, beginning in such areas as Boulder and Denver, CO; Scottsdale, AZ; and Kitsap and Clark counties in Washington.

One of the key elements in green building is LEED—Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design—a nationally recognized voluntary green building rating system for building design, construction, and operation. Performance is measured in five key areas: water savings, sustainable site development, energy efficiency, materials selection, and indoor environmental quality.

Buildings account for 12% of potable water consumption. For water efficiency, credits can be obtained for water-efficient landscaping, innovative wastewater technologies, and water-use reduction. LEED programs include retail, schools, multiple buildings, and on-campus building projects; neighborhood development; homes; core and shell development projects; commercial interior projects; existing building operations and maintenance; and new commercial construction and major renovation projects. LEED programs are being developed for healthcare and labs.

LEED was developed to provide a consistent, credible standard for what constitutes a green building and is based on a consensus-based process. Federal and state agencies choose LEED as a standard.  Those seeking LEED certification must be familiar with the system and take recommended workshops. They typically have professional expertise in architecture, engineering, facilities management, or interior design. A core competency is required. Tracks tied to specific professions go beyond those competencies. LEED-certification hopefuls also must take an exam. Nearly 40,000 people are LEED-accredited professionals and are qualified to serve on a building team to guide a project through a green building LEED process.

The first step toward LEED certification is to register a project. To earn certification, a building project must meet certain prerequisites and benchmarks—or credits—within a variety of categories. Depending on the number of credits, projects can earn certified, silver, gold, or platinum recognition. LEED certified buildings have reduced operating costs, increased health benefits, and conserved natural resources. The USGBC also is developing ongoing education to respond to rapidly changing green technologies.

“LEED was developed to be a guideline to define green building,” says Holowka. “Before there was LEED, anyone could say they had a green building and really didn’t know what it took to make a green building. Maybe they had solar panels, but one thing doesn’t make it a green building.” Next Page >

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