 |
|
Catching On. Johnson Controls is one of many owners going
green. |
Proponents of sustainable
buildings are grappling with technically difficult and politically
charged issues, particularly relating to the use of refrigerants
in mechanical systems. The issue rose to the surface recently
with the announcement of a new way to rate chillers that contain
hydrochlorofluorocarbons (HCFCs), in what has become the defacto
standard of "greenness," the Leadership in Energy
& Environmental Design rating system created by the U.S.
Green Building Council.
USGBCs technical and scientific
advisory committee has recommended revising the LEED "ozone-depletion"
credit that rewards projects for not using HCFCs or halons
in mechanical systems. The new credit will use a formula that
will allow more freedom in refrigerant selection and will
take into account potential for leakage and ozone depletion
and the impact on global warming, said Nigel Howard, USGBC
vice president, at the councils Greenbuild conference,
Nov. 10-12, in Portland, Ore. The credit "will be more
performance based."
Reaction to the credit revision
is mixed. "This is good news," says Dan Nall, senior
vice president, Flack & Kurtz, New York City. "The
older version looked at the ozone depletion index only,"
he said. But less efficient systems "may have a global
warming impact larger than the ozone depletion impact."
Other sources point to a U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency schedule to ban import and production of
many types of HCFCs by 2020. A complete ban will go into effect
by 2030. "You are not doing the client a service by specifying
a chiller with a phase-out date," said Rob Bolin, vice
president for sustainable design at Syska Hennessy Group,
Los Angeles. "A chiller should last more than 15 years."
The same USGBC committee also is
studying possibility of including a credit in LEED for reducing
the content of polyvinyl chloride (PVC) in buildings. Those
that support avoiding PVC use say it is a source of dioxins.
They point to studies that suggest a link between dioxin exposure
and cancer as well as reproductive and developmental defects.
The plastics industry maintains
that PVC is more durable and has better thermal properties
than many of its alternatives and accounts for only 1% of
dioxin production. A draft report from USGBC is expected next
month.
Several other "sustainable"
building announcements were made at Greenbuild, which drew
6,300 people. These include launch of a Mexico Green Building
Council and licensing of LEED to the India Green Building
Council.
USGBC also signed a memorandum
of understanding with Chinas ministry of construction
to cooperate on several efforts, including development of
a rating system. Chinas system "may or may not
be like LEED," said Howard.
In addition to expanding beyond
the U.S., the council is adapting LEED to more types of projects.
Last month, it released a version focusing on operation and
maintenance of existing buildings and another addressing tenant
space construction and renovation. The new versions join LEED-NC,
which primarily is geared to commercial and institutional
new construction. Adaptations tailored to the core and shell
of speculative buildings, residential construction and neighborhood
developments also are in the works.
 |
|
Fedrizzi |
The council has grown phenomenally1,000%
in the past four years alone, it says. There now are 5,300
member organizations, which include corporations, government
agencies and nonprofits. Earlier this month, San Francisco
and Boston announced requirements that city-owned projects
achieve at least a silver LEED rating. Other users include
Chicago; Austin, Texas; Seattle and Portland. Several federal
agencies also have adopted LEED, including the General Services
Administration and Dept. of State.
The council plans to add as many
as fifteen key staff positions in 2005, said Rick Fedrizzi,
who was appointed president and CEO in April. Fedrizzi is
concerned about the organizations rapid growth. "I
am literally trying to apply the brakes," he said. "I
want to strategically look at what we have created."
(Photo top by U.S. Green Building Council,
bottom by Joann Gonchar for ENR)
|