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Can construction
embrace sustainability? Jim Lammie, director emeritus of Parsons
Brinckerhoff, has charged the Construction Industry Institute
to "develop best practices and innovative ideas"
in the field. Sustainable development requires a change in
ethical values and company culture, which he defined as "what
you do and what your company does when no one is looking."
CIIs annual members event
drew 500 major owners and contractors to Vancouver, B.C.,
July 27-29. Conference chairman J. Norman Lockington, technology
vice president for Canadian steel maker Dofasco, Hamilton,
Ontario, introduced sustainability as "the interdependence
of economic success, social well-being and environmental protection,
or the triple bottom line." He said leading businesses
now report annually on social and environmental performance
as well as their financial performance because "they
know it provides a more complete measure of long-term value
creation and strategic opportunity."
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| Lammie
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Lammie noted advances in sustainability
such as the development of standards by the U.S. Green Building
Council and the U.K.s strategy for more sustainable
construction. He said 77% of construction companies in the
U.K. have a sustainable development policy, citing reasons
such as regulation, competitive edge, client policy, enhanced
reputation, reducing legal risks and investing in the future.
"But they dont mention the most important reason
of all," Lammie said, which is that this "is the
ethical and right thing to do."
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| Sturgeon |
CII is a research group that brings
together major owners and contractors to improve the life-cycle
cost-effectiveness of capital projects in areas such as safety,
schedule, cost and security. CII Chairman Lester L. Sturgeon,
division vice president for global facilities engineering
at Abbott Laboratories, Abbott Park, Ill., said the group
will accept Lammies pitch. CII considers sustainability
a "key area of focus" and will be funding research
on the subject next year. Projects approved for the fall 2004
funding cycle include "Leading Indicators to Project
Outcomes."
Lammie also questioned why U.S.
contractors say "green" projects cost 30% more than
traditional projects. He said the real added costs are about
2% in the U.K. and 4% in the U.S.
Ed Feiner, chief architect for
the General Services Administration, said his agency, the
"landlord for the federal government," has made
it an objective for all new and rehabbed buildings to be certified
under the U.S. Green Building Councils Leadership in
Energy and Environmental Design program. "The question
is how green should you be?" Feiner asked. "We have
found that a 2.5% bump in first costs can achieve a certified
or silver rating under LEED."
In some cases, the payback on energy
savings may be guaranteed by the contractor. In renovating
its four buildings in Washington, D.C., the National Geographic
Society achieved a 10% savings in energy costs and a $300,000
annual savings in operating costs. The buildings, which ranged
from 20 to 100 years old, had lower water consumption and
lower waste disposal costs. Michael Arny, president of the
Leonardo Academy and chairman of the councils LEED for
Existing Buildings...
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