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...Guenthers team on a $5.7-million
diagnostic and treatment center for disabled children in New
Yorks Sullivan County. The certified project received
fewer points for optimizing energy performance than she had
anticipated.
Energy modeling submitted to the
council satisfied grant application requirements. But the
calculation method was different than the American Society
of Heating, Refrigerating and Air-Conditioning Engineers
energy standard cited by LEED, making performance seem artificially
low, says Guenther.
Such complaints are not falling
on deaf ears. Earlier this month the council closed the first
public comment period on a revamped LEED that it hopes to
launch during the second half of 2005. Version 2.2 will not
change the existing structure but is intended to fix credit
problems and update reference standards.
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Smoking
Allowed Residential
project required credit interpretation. (Photo by Joann
Gonchar for ENR)
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Many familiar with 2.2 say the
changes are substantial. For the energy standard, "we
entered into direct dialogue with ASHRAE to achieve shared
performance goals," says Templeton.
Version 2.2 cites an updated version
of ASHRAEs energy standard. It includes a new calculation
method that is more appropriate for use when the performance
goal is better than code, according to Jason Glazer, president
of Gard Analytics, Park Ridge, Ill., and chair of the ASHRAE
subcommittee charged with developing the new calculation method.
"Now when two buildings claim that energy performance
is 20% better than [energy standard] 90.1, we can be assured
that both are the same caliber building," he says.
Besides updating LEED, the council
is expanding the system. Late last year, it released a version
focusing on operation and maintenance of existing buildings
and another addressing tenant space construction and renovation.
An adaptation tailored to the core and shell of speculative
buildings is in pilot phase and versions for homes and new
developments are under way.
The council also is developing
application guides to make LEED a better fit for different
market segments such as health-care, schools and laboratories.
The health care application guide, for example, will likely
include credits to address the importance of process water
in addition to potable water, energy efficiency of medical
equipment and issues that impact health of occupants.
"We are looking at LEED through
the more precise lens of health care," says Gail Vittori,
co-director of the Center for Maximum Potential Building Systems,
Austin, and chair of the health care guide committee.
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Pre-Existing
Conditions
Nursing school building depends on central campus chiller
that uses a
banned refrigerant. (Photo courtesy
of BNIM/© Hester +
Hardaway Photography)
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A profound change for LEED would
be a move toward a system based on life cycle assessment (LCA),
a methodology that evaluates factors such as embodied energy,
waste disposal and potential for global warming and ozone
depletion of building products and components.
Other rating tools, like BREEAM,
rely on LCA. "They may be more comprehensive, but are
not as easy to implement as LEED," says Stephen Selkowitz,
building technologies department head at Lawrence Berkeley
National Laboratory, Berkeley, Calif. "There are always
tradeoffs."
The first obstacle to adopting
LCA is inconsistent protocols and methods used by U.S. manufacturers,
says Nigel Howard, USGBC vice president of LEED and international
programs. Another hurdle is incorporating "copious quantities"
of data "into practical, intuitive and easy to use...tools,"
he says.
The council recently started working
with trade associations, material and product manufacturers
and LCA experts to implement the methodology into LEED, says
Howard. "This work will not reinvent wheels, but rather
adapt appropriately...and support existing initiatives,"
he says.
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U.K. Pioneer of
Environmental Rating Tool for Buildings
By Peter Reina
The granddaddy
of environmental rating systems is the U.K.s Building
Research Establishment Environmental Assessment Method.
International development
in environmental ratings broadly sprang from the
U.K., says Alan Yates, technical director of The
Building Research Establishment Ltd. (BRE), Watford.
During the U.K. building boom of the 1980s, developers
called on BRE, owned by a not-for-profit trust, for
an objective yardstick of energy efficiency.
BRE, then a government agency,
widened the scope from energy alone to a range of environmental
parameters, says Yates. In 1993, BREEAM was relaunched
to provide an overall indication of performance,
he says.
In 1998, individual criteria
were assigned different weights, to get a more
balanced scale, says Yates. A rating of pass,
good, very good or excellent is possible.
The organization conducts
about 100 office building assessments each year, which
represent 20 to 25% of the commercial space built, estimates
Yates. Among BREEAMs most prominent champions
is the U.K. government's regeneration agency, English
Partnerships. It requires a "very good" rating
for proposed projects on its land. Until an assessment
is done satisfactorily, "we dont hand over
the freehold," says John Muncaster, a partnership
senior urban designer.
Since introducing the requirement
in 2001, large house builders have warmed to the system,
says Muncaster. Once they start doing it and delivering
it, they do get quite enthusiastic, he says.
But other practitioners detect
less industry enthusiasm. There is no driver to
stimulate interest in assessment, says Sarah Graham,
a registered assessor with W.S. Atkins PLC, Epsom. But
she suspects the European Unions new directive
on building energy performance may change perceptions.
Starting next January, all
25 member states must have tools for assessing energy
consumption and must comply with mandatory performance
values. Countries are establishing rating tools, and
the European Committee for Standardization is working
on an EU-wide system, says Brian Anderson, a BRE technical
director.
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