Posts Tagged ‘Green buildings’

AIA Edges Closer to USGBC Standards for Green Buildings

Thursday, August 12th, 2010

It costs more than $100,000 to fill out LEED certified.  Could the AIA offer a better way?  It’s surprising that the AIA still does not endorse LEED standards for green buildings.  There has been some progress in forming some kind of strategic alliance, but that is only in the area of advocacy, education and research.  There is still nothing concrete.  Nevertheless, the Architecture 2030 Bulletin and the AIA 2030 Commitment story are very interesting. The AIA website has many downloadable forms that comprise their own version of building performance measurement.  It’s likely that the AIA will step up to form their own rating system to compete with the United States Green Building Council (USGBC), which is a very lucrative non-profit organization that the government chose to use for their own needs to employ green strategies — and when the government chooses a program, everyone else follows.

I hope the AIA will offer an alternative form of measurement to the USGBC.  The USGBC’s process requires too many consultants and specialty firms to work independently on hundreds of credit applications.  Ideally, the architect and his/her engineering consultants should be able to perform all of the analysis as part of their basic services.  As of now, we get huge additional fee requests for the architect/engineers to help fill out LEED forms, and separate fee requests for energy models, LEED consulting, and commissioning services.  It costs more than $100,000 in miscellaneous fees just to fill out and upload credit point applications.  Many think that $100,000 could be used to improve the building’s performance.

Half of Commercial Buildings Could Go Green by 2015

Monday, January 18th, 2010

Going green in new and renovation projects is not as expensive as previously thought.  By 2015, green buildings could constitute approximately half of all commercial space, according to a study by Good Energies, Inc., a New York venture capital firm.  Although sustainable initiatives were perceived as a niche market just 10 years ago, developers now realize that going green in new and renovation projects is not as expensive as previously thought.

According to Greg Kats, senior director of climate change for New York-based Green Energies and the study’s author, he applied the U.S. Green Building Council’s Leadership in Energy Environmental Design standards – which encompass such categories as energy and water use, site location, landscaping and proximity to mass transit and shopping – to define what qualifies as a green building.  LEED certification was not required, though buildings had to adhere to the standards.

Similarly, a McGraw-Hill Construction study released last October found that the share of the green retrofit market could grow to 20 or 30 percent over the next five years.  That translates to market opportunities for major projects totaling $10.1 to $15.1 billion.  At present, green building practices are incorporated into five to nine percent of building retrofits.  The market opportunity for major projects – those costing more than $1 million – could total as much as $2.1 to $3.7 billion a year.

“We now have a large enough, detailed enough body of data to say that the presumption is ‘why wouldn’t you do a green building?’” Kats noted.  “It’s very cost-effective and it reduces risk in a number of areas including health, exposure to energy and water prices and obsolescence.”