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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Austin does less “hand-holding” on residential projects, Morgan notes. “Typically, a builder or architect submits the ratings spreadsheet to us, we review it for obvious problems, make recommendations and do monitoring during the construction process, and then do a final inspection at the end and issue the certificate. If the builder, design team, or homeowner requests it, we can provide a more thorough plan review and recommendations.”

The program has taken off in Austin over the years. Last year, Austin rated 1,049 single-family homes, which represents 21% of all new single-family homes permitted; that number has remained steady over the past few years.

For the commercial sector, Austin is involved in about 100 projects encompassing some 10 million to 12 million square feet. “That’s pretty substantial,” Morgan notes. “Five years ago, we had 18 projects on the books.”

Austin’s program has been so successful that other municipalities have turned to Austin officials for advice. “We were doing so much of that, our city management asked us to put together a business plan to pursue consulting for other municipalities,” Morgan says.

Doing Well by Doing Good in Wisconsin
Another award-winning program is the Wisconsin Environmental Initiative, which was selected Green Building Program of the Year in the 2006 National Green Building Awards. John Imes serves as the executive director. Green Built Home began in 1999 as a partnership with the Madison Area Builders Association. The program has since expanded throughout the state.

“The idea was for builders to make more investments in technology, practice, and mindset to reduce the environmental footprint of home construction and also home performance going forward, and to create market distinction for those builders who are making those investments,” says Imes.

The program’s philosophy had been “Doing well by doing good.”

“That meant doing well financially by doing well environmentally, so we worked with builders,” he says.

Program managers assembled a technical advisory committee comprising builders, association representatives, energy efficiency experts, architects, and environmental building designers to create a checklist of basic environmental requirements. With more than 330 items, Imes believes the list is one of the most comprehensive in the United States.

The list has basic requirements that every home must meet in terms of energy efficiency, stormwater runoff, and indoor air quality, as well as minimum criteria for other areas. The program is voluntary.

“But it also provides builders flexibility—once they meet those basic requirements—to put their own signature on green building,” says Imes. “In some cases, builders are taking more of a general approach. They’ve got point totals in a lot of different areas or may decide they want to highlight energy efficiency, air quality, or waste management. It gives them an opportunity to put their own signature on it.”

Marketing benefits include logos and signs for yards and homes, plaques for certified homes, media coverage, and apparel for builders.

Imes believes the public has surpassed builders in terms of the desire to incorporate more environmentally responsible practices, materials, and approaches to homebuilding. “We’re seeing a lot more demand in the marketplace,” he says. “The philosophy years ago was to create demand for those builders who were making those investments. If there are builders out there that aren’t interested, maybe they are not as successful.”

Wisconsin’s water efficiency features include the installation of kitchen and bathroom faucets and showerheads with gallons per minute that are less than what is called for in code, dual-flush toilets, a recirculating hot water loop system, and front-loading horizontal access clothes washers. Landscaped areas are credited for the use of rain gardens, native landscaping with a minimum of 40% of non-paved areas, and rainwater recovery from roofs for watering with a 50-gallon minimum storage capacity. Other credits are given for irrigation systems that include soil moisture or rain sensors.

Wisconsin’s program is organized with a minimum point total of 60. “We’ve developed a green build that shows a green gradient getting darker as it goes toward the right,” says Imes. “There’s a conventional home, a certified green-built home, and then a score for a particular house. Next Page >

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