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In the five years
since its launch, Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design
has become widely accepted as the standard of greenness
for buildings. This acceptance has come despite complaints
from users that the rating system, known as LEED, it is not
always an accurate indication of sustainability. Its popularity
continues to grow even though little is known about how buildings
certified under the still young system perform over the long
run.
One of the few efforts to quantify
the performance of LEED buildings is under way at the Center
for the Built Environment at the University of California,
Berkeley. It hopes to use its indoor environmental quality
survey to compare the performance of LEED and non-rated buildings.
As of November 2004, the center had collected a database of
responses from 25,000 occupants of 150 buildings to questions
on such topics as thermal comfort, indoor air quality and
lighting. Only six of these buildings were LEED rated.
Satisfaction levels for those six
buildings were "all over the map," says Charlie
Huizenga, CBE research specialist. However, the second highest
scorer for "overall building satisfaction" was the
LEED-rated headquarters for the Chesapeake Bay Foundation,
Annapolis, Md., completed in 2000. With so few rated buildings
in the database "the statistics are not necessarily rigorous,"
admits Huizenga. CBE is actively pursuing more rated projects. Click
here to view chart
In the absence of hard data, some
critics contend LEED lacks scientific rigor. But the systems
creator, the nonprofit U.S. Green Building Council, counters
that ease of use and widespread adoption are central to its
mission. "We are trying to achieve market transformation,
which requires balancing technological rigor with practical
reality," says Peter Templeton, USGBC director of LEED
and international programs.
Proponents of the rating system
say there is evidence that this transformation is well under
way. They point to such developments as competitive prices
and more selection for materials once considered alternative.
They also cite the growing list of municipalities, state governments
and federal agencies that have adopted LEED requirements.
Users say the system also has other
benefits. "Before LEED [green building] was more hit
or miss," says Dennis Wilde, senior project manager for
Gerding/Edlen Development Co. LLC. The developer is seeking
a LEED rating for a 245-unit residential project to be complete
in spring 2006 in its home city of Portland, Ore. Without
such a metric, "it would be easy to greenwash,"
he says.
Some sources say the resulting
product is superior. "It is a systematic approach to
better buildingsnot just green buildings,"
says Pamela Lippe, principal of E4 Inc., a New York City-based
high-performance building consultant. LEED addresses problems
like sick building syndrome and mold, she says.
To be successful, LEED projects
require buy-in from the whole team, users say. "It gets
away from its not my job attitude because
everyone is involved," says Thomas Perry, director of
engineering services for Shawmut Design and Construction,
Boston.
The certification process typically
begins in an early phase of design with project "registration."
The owner completes a checklist that outlines goals in six...
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