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The Leadership in Energy & Environmental
Design (LEED™) Program
By Charles Popeck
In June of 2000 the United States Green Building Council (USGBC)
introduced the 2.0 version of the Leadership in Energy and
Environmental Design (LEED) Green Building Rating System
for commercial, institutional, and high-rise residential buildings.
LEED evaluates environmental performance from a "whole
building" perspective over a building's life cycle. The
program has grown tremendously since then by proving itself
a viable method of providing a third-party green building
certification tool designed to ensure building owners and
occupants that their building meets stringent standards of
performance.
What is LEED?
The LEED green building rating system is a credit-based program
that guides architects through the design of an environmentally
sound building. A LEED building can achieve four different
levels of certification based on the number of points obtained.
The four levels of certification available and corresponding
LEED points are:
LEED Certified 26 to 32 points
LEED Silver 33 to 38 points
LEED Gold 39 to 51 points
LEED Platinum 52 to 69 points
Detailed information on all possible credits can be obtained
on the USGBC website at www.usgbc.org. Credits towards building
certification must be achieved in each of five environmental
categories:
Sustainable Sites
Topics such as erosion and sedimentation control, site selection,
Brownfield redevelopment, stormwater management, and light
pollution reduction are addressed in this category. Basic
strategies include site selection, onsite stormwater control,
reduced site disturbance and alternative transportation.
Water Efficiency
A particularly applicable category in the desert southwest
region is water efficiency. The water efficiency category
offers credits for water efficient landscaping, innovative
wastewater technologies, and water use reduction.
Energy & Atmosphere
With three prerequisites and six credits available, the Energy
and Atmosphere category offers more points than any other-a
total of 17. There are four fundamental strategies used in
this category to increase energy performance, reduce energy
demand, utilize any available site energy (including renewable
energy sources such as solar and wind), and maximize energy
efficiency. Various energy standards are referenced in this
category. Cumulative points are achieved by exceeding the
standards by 20 percent, 30 percent etc.
Materials & Resources
The strategies that are applied in this category include using
products made from post-consumer or post-industrial waste
materials. Products that are recyclable themselves, not just
made from recycled materials are also considered. Additionally,
materials and resources obtained within a 500 mile radius
of the project site are used to reduce the amount of fuel
required to transport materials to the site.
Indoor Environmental Quality
Using products free of Volatile Organic Compounds (VOCs) is
one of the basic strategies employed in this category. Paints
and coatings, carpeting, and other interior finish products
are also addressed. Building ventilation is also a major component
in this category. Owners can avoid a growing amount of litigation
due to "sick building syndrome" by incorporating
these strategies into their buildings.
A sixth LEED category, "Innovation
and Design Process" awards points toward certification
for innovative applications of materials or processes that
do not fit into any of the other five categories. Included
in this category in the credit that the project receives for
having a LEED Accredited Professional as a member of the project
team.
New LEED programs now include:
LEED Version 2.1 is an administrative
update to LEED Version 2.0. It is designed to streamline the
documentation requirements for LEED certification and provides
technical clarifications to version 2.0.
LEED for Existing Buildings,
released in June of 2002 as a pilot program, provides a way
of recognizing and certifying existing buildings that are
being renovated in an energy efficient and environmentally
responsible manner. LEED-EB is a program designed to compliment
the LEED version 2.0 and provides existing building owners
with a way to meet their sustainable operations goals. There
are currently over 60 projects participating in the pilot
phase of LEED-EB. The LEED Rating System for Existing Buildings
addresses:
whole-building cleaning and maintenance issues including
chemical use
ongoing indoor air quality
energy efficiency
water efficiency
recycling programs and facilities
exterior maintenance programs, and
systems upgrades to meet green building energy, water, IAQ,
and lighting performance standards
LEED for Commercial Interiors,
also a pilot, was released in 2003 extends LEED sustainable
design and construction objectives to tenant improvement
projects. The LEED-CI system addresses performance areas
including:
selection of sustainable tenant space
efficiency of water usage
energy performance optimization including lighting and lighting
controls
resource utilization for interior building systems and furnishings
indoor environmental quality including comprehensive emissions
criteria
LEED-CI was designed to complement the LEED for Core &
Shell (LEED-CS) Rating System currently under development
by USGBC member committees. Together, LEED-CI and LEED-CS
will establish green building criteria for commercial office
real estate for use by developers, designers and tenants.
What contractors need to know.
Being a relatively new program, LEED has been embraced by
many Architectural and Design firms because design is always
a step ahead of construction. Many construction companies
who were not aware of the LEED program in its early stages
are now being faced with LEED requirements for projects
they are working on, and wondering how to "catch up".
Being a contractor, I enjoy building things and find it
difficult to find the time to get educated about new programs
such as LEED. But being a LEED Accredited Professional myself,
I offer my advice for getting familiar with the LEED program:
Become involved with the Arizona Chapter of the USGBC
Implement a green building program at your company as soon
as possible
Visit the U.S. Green Building Council's website at www.usgbc.org
Get a copy of the LEED Reference Guide and read it
Charles Popeck is a principal
with Green Ideas, a Phoenix-based consulting firm specializing
in environmental building. He can be reached at 480-807-0062,
popeck@cox.net, or at www.egreenideas.com.
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