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Green Building News
Thursday, June 03, 2010
Green Building Growing Rapidly on Campuses
Leading green building consultant, Jerry Yudelson, principal of Yudelson Associates and author of 12 green building books, said that American campuses now host more than 3000 LEED-registered projects, about 15 percent of the total of all LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) projects. Moreover, with nearly 600 LEED-certified projects, American colleges and universities have found a practical and highly visible way to demonstrate their commitment to sustainable practices.
According to the new Yudelson Associates white paper, based on end-of-2009 data from the U.S. Green Building Council, the four leading campuses for LEED project registrations are, in order, the University of Florida, Harvard University, the University of California at Santa Barbara and the University of Washington. The rapid growth in LEED registrations at leading campuses has come from their adoption of LEED as a way of certifying the sustainability of campus operations.
Jaimie Galayda, PhD, research director at Yudelson Associates assisted Jerry Yudelson in the preparation of this white paper. Galayda says that there is more going on at the campuses than just LEED certification. “Going beyond the LEED rating system, the Association for the Advancement of Sustainability in Higher Education (AASHE) recently released its Sustainability Tracking, Assessment, and Rating System (STARS). This new campus sustainability rating system incorporates a number of criteria that evaluate green building achievements.”
To view the white paper, go to this link on the website.
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Thursday, April 29, 2010
Jerry Yudelson featured in Ecolibrium Magazine
“A trained engineer, Jerry Yudelson is considered one of the USA’s foremost thinkers about ecologically sustainable design. A consultant, speaker and author, his message is about the business case for building and developing in a sustainable manner. Ecolibrium caught up with him at the Green Cities conference held in Melbourne earlier this year.”
Download the article (PDF 1MB)
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Saturday, October 17, 2009
New book tells inside story of Civano development in Tucson
“Inside the Civano Project: A Case Study of Large-Scale Sustainable Neighborhood Development” is the first book in ages to tell the inside story of a “bottoms up” effort by activists in Tucson to create an energy and water-efficient community with a New Urbanist flavor, with a special focus on using the abundant solar energy of the Sonoran desert. What makes the book especially interesting is the extensive interviews with the participants. The effort succeeded: today Civano is the largest sustainable mixed-use community in the country and a great model for others to visit. What’s also interested is that the development’s 60 percent reduction in heating and cooling energy and 55 percent reduction in potable water use is documented each year. And, what I find even more unusual, in Civano’s first phase, there are only two private pools for 600 homes, with everyone else using the two easy-to-walk-to community pools. Even in the current marketplace for home sales, Civano’s build-out continues, as more people are drawn to its community feeling.
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German green home wins Solar Decathlon
German’s PV-covered home won this year’s competition by producing twice as much energy as it used using the Net Metering final phase of the competition. The U.S. Department of Energy supported the contest and announced the final results. Why can’t every home produce more energy than it uses? It’s time for a wholesale rethinking of “traditional” home design to a “new normal” design that makes every home a net contributor to the electric grid.
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