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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“We didn’t want to get into the one-, two-, three-star type of rating systems,” he adds. “Some builders said they didn’t want to stay in a two-star hotel. But one of the issues was if you’ve got a star system and 69 points is one star and 70 points is two stars, then you really have to have an auditing protocol to ensure it is actually a 70-point house.”

Imes contends that drives cost and creates more of a bureaucratic system rather than a voluntary system.

“We do spot checks and test every home in terms of the energy-efficiency testing, and once a level of performance is determined, then it is more random,” he says. “Let the public judge what the point total means. We want that dialogue to be between the homebuyer or remodeling customer and the builder or remodeler.

“When we do the spot checks, we’ll ask for the Material Safety Data Sheets for all of the products used. We work a lot with the Wisconsin Energy Star Homes program, which I think is one of the more rigorous energy efficiency programs in the country.”

Builders and remodelers can express green building in different ways as long as they meet basic requirements.

“May the most eco-efficient builder or remodeler win,” says Imes.

In Dane County, WI—the state’s fastest-growing county—the number of green-built homes has increased to 60%. During the program’s first year, 26 homes qualified; now, there are more than 1,200. Interest is increasing in the greening of multifamily developments and remodeling.

Wisconsin’s program is not affiliated with the USGBC. The program was the first east of the Mississippi River and the first in the Midwest. When the program began, there had been some vocal skeptics from within well-respected builders’ circles, notes Imes. One of his proudest achievements was when one of the program’s strongest critics turned a corner and became one of its strongest advocates after other builders convinced him that as a group they’d either “be driving the bus down the road or chasing the bus down the road,” Imes notes.

Within a year, the Madison Area Builders Association had created a Green Built committee, thus creating a model for other homebuilders’ associations throughout the state.

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“I didn’t want to create an empire in Madison, Wisconsin, with a bunch of green building minions running a program,” says Imes. “We really wanted to create leadership. I think we’ve struck that balance between a comprehensive checklist and very meaningful reductions in terms of the environmental benefit.”

Colorado’s Codes
Another regional first is in Boulder, CO, where the municipality is the first in the country to mandate a green code for residential building. A predecessor to Boulder’s current Green Points program was an energy option program, put into place after the energy crisis of the mid-’70s. Next Page >

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