LEED™-ing the way
LEED™ scores projects in six categories including Sustainable Sites, Water Efficiency, Energy and Atmosphere, Materials and Resources, Indoor Environmental Quality, and Innovation & Design. Of 69 possible points, projects must get 26 to be certified, 33 to be certified silver, 39 to be certified gold, and 52 to be certified platinum. Certification is given after the building is complete to assure that predicted performance has been achieved. Seventy projects have been certified since the rating system's inception, and over 900 registered projects currently await certification. Over 400 of the approximately 900 projects registered with LEED™ are federal, state, and local public projects. Local projects make up the largest share. Approximately 16 percent, or 145, of LEED™ registered projects incorporate libraries. While a handful of high-profile green projects were completed prior to the establishment of the USGBC ten years ago and many continue to be completed without using the rating system, LEED™ is gaining momentum as the standard for green design. State governments in California, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania use LEED™ for their projects, as do the local governments of Austin, TX; Arlington, VA; Boulder, CO; Cook County, IL; Portland, OR; Seattle; and, in California, Los Angeles, San Diego, San Jose, and San Mateo. In some of these locales, LEED™ has been incorporated into local building codes. Requests for proposals (RFPs) for public projects now routinely require candidates to list their LEED™ experience and expertise. This rapid entry of LEED™ into the mainstream has created a rush among architecture and engineering firms to gain competence and experience in green design, one of USGBC's goals. The council's inaugural national Greenbuild convention in Austin last year sold out early at twice the expected attendance and created standing-room-only crowds on the exposition floor and in the seminar rooms.Early collaboration
The idea that all design decisions are interrelated is especially true with green design. This requires early collaboration among design disciplines (and possibly with community entities), which goes against standard practice in many architecture firms. This is a key difference between conventional design, where some green features may be tacked on at the end of a linear design process, and truly green design, where design integration begins at the earliest stages of the project. The selection of a lighter ceiling color, for example, can improve the performance of lighting, both natural and artificial. Thus, the library will need fewer fixtures or smaller window apertures. This reduces the heating and cooling load, which then calls for smaller mechanical equipment and ducts. These compounding impacts drive down the initially hefty price of the project. Basically, design integration makes green projects cost-effective.Location, location, urban location
Site selection, important for any project, is critical for green design. LEED™ encourages urban redevelopment because of the infrastructure already in place. Alternative transportation is usually possible. The site will be less disturbed. Stormwater management exists. And an urban site contributes to the big picture: there will be lower impact on the urban heat island effect and a limited increase in light pollution. In turn, LEED™ discourages the use of greenfield sites, or undeveloped land. Site selection also influences building design. Opportunities to orient the building for optimum solar exposure, for instance, can enhance the power of daylighting and significantly improve energy efficiency. That is why it is important to select your design team before you select a site.Energy is LEED™'s middle name
A core goal of green design is to produce buildings that use significantly less energy. Such buildings create less pollution. They also deplete fewer nonrenewable resources and cause less damage from the extraction and transportation of those resources. Using existing industry standards as benchmarks, LEED™ awards points for energy efficiency savings. Up to ten points are awarded for besting the standards by 60 percent in a new building and 50 percent in an existing one. Other energy-related points come when buildings employ renewable energy like solar or wind power, undergo additional building commissioning (independent testing), eliminate ozone-depleting refrigerants, or measure and verify monitoring and use of green power (power produced by utility companies from renewable resources). The design for energy efficiency requires coordination with other disciplines to optimize the building envelope (walls, glazing, roofing), lighting, and controls. Good plans often result in dramatically downsized mechanical systems that can save enough initial and operating costs to pay for the extra expense of the design and materials. Which is greener, metal studs made from recycled steel or wood studs harvested from certified forests? LEED™ does not specifically answer questions like this, but it does encourage designers to study the options. LEED™ documentation requires research into material origins and life cycle, and the system awards points for use of materials with reused and recycled content. To support local economies and decrease transportation impacts, LEED™ values materials manufactured locally or within a 500-mile radius. Rapidly renewable materials, like cork flooring, are encouraged, as are wood products from well-managed forests. The system requires that green projects include areas dedicated to recycling. LEED™ also encourages the reuse of buildings, which means historic renovation projects can score as well as new construction. Additionally, construction waste management is encouraged, which can be simple or not, depending on the level of cooperation from the contractor and the quality of the local recycling industry.Let Mother Nature work
Andrew Carnegie asked that libraries designed under his grants include 'a representation of the rays of a rising sun, and above 'LET THERE BE LIGHT.'' Turn of the century libraries, like those built 2000 years earlier, made the most of natural daylight and natural ventilation, two hallmarks of current green design. The relatively recent invention of artificial lighting and mechanical heating and cooling systems reduced the need to design for daylighting and natural ventilation. Then came architecture marked by windowless buildings dependent on artificial means for supporting life. Operable windows became an endangered species in libraries for fear of ultraviolet light, glare, and heat gain or loss. Now it is common knowledge that poor indoor environments can be life-threatening. However, few building owners consider the benefits of good indoor environments, which have a documented positive impact on health, productivity, human performance, learning, mood, comfort, and employee retention. Personnel require a much greater investment than building costs. Small improvements in human performance more than offset most of the cost of improved indoor environments. LEED™ calls for a minimum for indoor air quality and control of environmental tobacco smoke. A building wins points for CO2 monitoring, increased ventilation effectiveness, indoor air quality management plans, use of low-emitting materials, indoor chemical and pollutant source control, controllable heating and cooling systems, thermal comfort, and available daylight and views. Enlightened designers have learned that the benefits of daylight and natural ventilation can be enjoyed without energy penalties. In fact, properly designed daylighting improves human performance and health, saves energy, and reduces the cost of library construction. Aided by new glazing technology, intelligent lighting controls, and sophisticated daylighting and energy analysis software, green designers can fine-tune building envelopes to take advantage of high-quality sunlight while controlling heat loss or gain.What are the hurdles?
LEED™ certification can be complicated, and critics have found it cumbersome and sometimes inconsistent. It also adds immediate expenses to a project. Registration and certification fees typically total less than $3000 for libraries under 75,000 square feet but max out at $9000 for libraries over 300,000 square feet. Prerequisites for LEED™ certification include basic building commissioning, which is not yet standard practice in many regions. In addition, design fees typically rise owing to the need to spend more time on design and construction phase meetings, research, and documentation. Usually the burden of educating the funding agencies, the public, contractors, and other stakeholders falls to the design team, which often includes one or more special consultants. Bid prices may reflect costs to fulfill additional requirements associated with LEED™, such as certifying recycled content of materials used. The good news is that standard construction documents now incorporate LEED™ requirements, and new computerized reporting templates in LEED™ 2.1 have streamlined documentation. Manufacturers, seeing that LEED™ compliance sells, have caught up with reporting requirements and now make information that was once difficult to find part of their standard literature. When planning a project, consider hiring an experienced green design firm or at least make sure the design team includes a knowledgeable green design consultant. Then incorporate any additional certification costs into the initial project budgets. The USGBC has a listing of LEED™ - accredited professionals (www.usgbc.org). Also, the American Institute of Architects offers an excellent tutorial on writing green RFPs, which includes guidelines and examples of actual RFPs (www.aia.org/pia/cote/rfp) and feedback from users of those RFPs.A greener future
Approximately five percent of new commercial and institutional construction is some shade of green. As demand continues to grow, competition will heat up among designers, contractors, and manufacturers. This should drive down costs for green design. The prices of innovative new green materials and systems should follow suit as demand and production volume increases. Perhaps conventional design will become obsolete as the benefits and savings of green design become obvious to even the most entrenched critics. Such an outcome will be a good introduction to the real technological shift to come. If we reach a point where all new and existing buildings are LEED™ - certified, we will still be wasting our finite resources. Truly green architecture will exist when we are designing buildings that restore fresh water and air and produce more energy than they consume. That is a challenge that enlightened librarians can help us meet, one building at a time.We are currently offering this content for free. Sign up now to activate your personal profile, where you can save articles for future viewing
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