Title: LEED
1LEED and the Built Environment Sholem
Prasow LEEDTM Accredited Professional Teknion
Furniture Systems
2Teknion Confidential and Proprietary
- This presentation is not to be copied or
distributed in whole or in part without express
permission from Teknion. - In the event any of this material, with the
permission of Teknion, is edited, copied,
repurposed or used in any manner other than
presented in its entirety, all such reasonable
usage is to be marked and identified in a
prominent manner as Information provided by
Teknion.
3Objectives of This Session
- Why LEED
- Review of LEED
- Focus on LEED-NC (New Construction)
- Highlights of LEED-EB (Existing Buildings) --
New! - LEED and Environmentally Preferable Purchasing
(EPP) - Brief discussion of LEED-CI (balloting in July)
- How Manufacturers can /ought to help (using
Teknion furniture as an example) - Competitive Advantage for your organization -
- Discussion
4How Important are Buildings?
- Damaging the Earth
- A typical North American construction process
generates 2.5 lb. of solid waste per square foot
of floor space (about 500 lb. per eventual
occupant)
5How Important are Buildings?
- Polluting the Water ...
- 5 billion gallons of water are used to flush
toilets daily in the US - (I dont have the data on the amount of water
used to water the grass around the building)
6How Important are Buildings?
- Wasting Energy ...
- Buildings account for 30 to 37 of the total
energy used and 60 to 68 of electricity used - 40 Billion is spent annually in the US to air
condition buildings (1/6 of electricity
generated) - 75 of US electricity comes from fossil fuels
7How Important are Buildings?
- Polluting the Atmosphere ...
- Buildings account for
- 49 of SO2 emissions (acid rain)
- 25 of NO emissions (smog)
- 10 of particulate emissions (lung disease)
- 35 of CO2 emissions (global warming)
- The US is the worlds largest emitter of Ozone
Depleting substances (UV damage)
8How Important are Buildings?
- Wasting Materials and depleting Resources ...
- Construction and demolition of buildings account
for 40 of the solid waste in land fills
9How Important are Buildings?
- Making people sick and unproductive due to
unhealthy indoor Air Quality ... - 90 of a persons time is spent indoors, where
levels of pollution are 2 to 5 to 100 times worse
than outdoors
10How Does LEED fit in?
11How Does LEED Fit In?
- The Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design
(LEED) program of the US Green Building Council
has issued a rating system that anyone can choose
to comply with - LEED for new construction and major
renovations(LEED-NC vers 2.1) is the flagship
standard, - 1000 plus registrations, 90 plus certifications
12How Does LEED Fit In Canada?
- The Canadian Green Building Council has licensed
the LEED system from the USGBC - LEED Canada is about to be released.
- The Draft LEED Canada document in circulation
suggests that there are few changes to the US
LEED - NC 2.1 document beyond localization of
certain county-specific codes and standards (Mar.
15/04)
13What exactly is LEED - NC ?
- LEED-NC is a lot of things combined
- 1. A Green Building Rating System for New
Construction and Major Renovations - 2. An Incentive Program for Green Design,
Integrated Design, Elegant Design, and Good
Design - 3. A recognition and publicity medium
14What is a Green Building?
- A Green Building is a building that is
constructed in a responsible manner that
minimizes the environmental impact of the
building on the environment, on its community and
on the health of its occupants - A Green Building is a profitable building that
costs less to run, often called a High
Performance Building - A Green Building is a building that has been
shown to improve the satisfaction and
productivity of its occupants as well
15How Does the LEED Rating System Work?
- Credits and Points are awarded by the USGBC for
demonstrated adherence to specific quantified
performance measures in 5 Design Categories - Existing, proven technologies, industry
standards and current best practices are
required to achieve those credits and points - beyond building codes
16LEEDTM-NC Point Distribution
Five LEED credit categories
17What is Green Design?
- Design and Construction Practices that support
and improve the health of the systems that
sustain life - Bill Reed
- The LEED rating system is a first step aimed at
the support component of the above definition
.. The training wheels
18What is Integrated Design?
- Classical waterfall design-development process
cant achieve the results desired - Integrated design is the mindset, the tools, and
the process of engaging all parties
simultaneously in optimizing all elements of the
design, construction planning, and operation of
the building /facility holistically - Daylighting example ...
19What is Elegant Design?
- A design that achieves the design objectives
with minimal resources - Bill Reed
- What is Good Design?
- The best, period. Not the best compromise.
- Not built to building code
- Not a less than 2 year payback
20Building Code
- A building built to building code standards
means only that the owner just missed breaking
the law. - Bill Reid, 2003
- If a building falls down and kills the owner,
the builder will be put to death. If the building
kills the owners son, the builders son will be
put to death. - ... Code of Hamurabi, 1800 BC
21Building Code
- In China, during the Shang dynasty (1200 BC),
buildings were built with an (unwilling) army of
soldiers buried in front of them in order to
protect the occupants from the spirits of the
underworld. - Current building codes resulted from the Chicago
fire of 1871, and were focussed on protecting the
property (and lives) of the building occupants,
as demanded by the insurance companies. -
- Many conservative trade best practice standards
exceed typical building practices based upon
building code requirements
22Building Code
- In time, building codes will evolve to protect
the long term health of the occupants, the
community and the environment. Today they are
still focused on occupant health and safety and
protect from catastrophic failures (fire and and
building collapse -- see history.) - Many conservative trade best practice standards
exceed typical building practices based upon
building code requirements -- consistent with
the intent of meeting green building objectives.
23Example -- ASHRAE 90.1 -1999
- And that is only a beginning. The LEED Rating
System offers additional points for exceeding the
energy use standard by up to an additional 60 --
a number considered achievable if todays best
practices are used!
242 Year Payback
- A typical building (designed in a non-integrated
manner) begins with the architect completing a
design and turning it over to the engineering
firm for engineering design and costing - The engineering firm then designs the least cost
building to code (with initial costs only in
mind) - In cases where higher first costs can result in
lower operating costs, those alternatives are
typically selected if the choice results in a .
25 Less than 2 Year Payback
- Lets see what this really means .
- For example, a 1.9 year payback is equivalent to
a 71 compound annual rate of return. - If a 26 year old invested 100 at age 26 and
achieved an compound annual 71 return, the
investment would be worth - 2.86 Billion at age 58!!!!
- If he/she rejected all potential investments with
more than a 2 year payback, this would mean
he/she would be satisfied with no less...
26More on a 2 Year Payback
- Clearly, a change in mindset is also a
requirement for building green buildings ... - Educating clients to use longer term measures is
a key part of the Green Building Process - (LEED-EB suggests 10 year payback as a simple
alternative) -
27So, LEED Buildings Cost More?
- Actually, first costs are not significantly
higher.... - Following an Integrated Design Process typically
generates at least as many savings as costs. - Studies show that on the average LEED buildings
cost 2 more initially, with substantially
reduced annual operating costs-- some can cost
less!
28The Prie Is Right! What Being ustainable Costs
Interagency Sustainability Working
Group Washington, DC April 7, 2004
David Eakin, PE Chief Engineer Office of the
Chief Architect Public Buildings Service
John Amatruda, RA Elizabeth Heider, AIA
29Construction Cost Impacts
30Construction Cost Perspective
Estimating Accuracy
31Sustainability Cost ContextIntegrated
Performance Initiatives
- Sustainability
- (Environmental Design-
- Being Green)
- Workplace Productivity
- (Space Equity, Comfort, Flexibility,
- Reliability, Sense of Place, etc.)
- Terrorism
- (Levels of Threat Blast, Small
- Arms, Air-Born, Theft/Assault)
- Seismic Safety
- (New FEMA Requirements)
- Historic Preservation
- (Historic Districts, Building
- Element Preservation/Restoration)
32Copies Available SoonWhole Building Design Guide
Study findings along with an applications guide
will be posted on the WBDG in the Spring 2004.
www.wbdg.org
33LEED Suite Overview LEED-NCLEED-CILEED-
CSLEED-EB(ISO 14001)
34Technical Overview of LEEDTM
- LEED is performance-based where possible,
compatible with standard design processes,
self-evaluating, self-documenting, but not
self-certifying. Certification is solely done by
the USGBC. - Four levels of certification for LEED-NC
- LEED Certified 26 - 32 points
- Silver Level 33 - 38 points
- Gold Level 39 - 51 points
- Platinum Level 52 points (69 possible)
35LEED-NC Rating System
- There are 5 Sustainable Categories of Concern
- PLUS a Category for Design and Process
Innovation - The Rating System Contains
- 7 Prerequisites -- Mandatory Requirements!
- 32 credits with 64 core points
- 4 Design Innovation points
- 1 LEED Accredited Professional point
36LEED Suite Overview
- LEED-NC is the flagship standard, designed for
new construction and and major renovations - LEED-CI (Commercial Interiors) is a subset of
LEED-NC designed for renovations of tenant spaces
-- where the occupant has little choice about
Core and Shell - LEED-CS (Core and Shell) is a subset of LEED-NC
designed for landlords who are building (or
renovating) buildings but have little choice
about tenant fit-out (not addressed in this
presentation)
37LEED Suite Overview
- LEED-EB (Existing Building) is a subset of
LEED-NC designed for improving building
performance with upgrades that do not
significantly change the interior or exterior
surfaces of the building -- and more - (ISO 14001, while not part of the LEED Suite,
completes the picture. It is designed with
similar goals to improve the the behavior of
management and employees who occupy the
building.) -
38Focus on LEED-NC Highlights
- This presentation will focus on the highlights of
LEED-NC and how Furniture impacts LEED-NC - LEED-CI tracks LEED-NC, with relatively minor
adaptations - The New! LEED-EB draft contains many significant
interesting changes -- up for public comments
(by Mar 30) and ballot -
39LEED-EB Highlights
- LEED-EB focuses on upgrading and operating
buildings in a formal sustainable way on an
ongoing basis - In addition to LEED-NC areas of focus, LEED-EB
includes - whole building cleaning /maintenance protocols
- recycling programs
- exterior maintenance
- systems upgrades
- to green performance standards
40LEED-EB Highlights (continued)
- LEED-EB is three rating systems in one
- A certification and rating system for existing
buildings (at least 5 years old) - A re-certification and rating system for
originally-certified LEED-NC buildings - A periodic re-certification and rating system for
originally-certified LEED-EB buildings (1 yr..
recommended, maximum 5 yr. cycle)
41LEED-EB Highlights
- LEED-EB methodology focuses on
- policy mandates
- measured conformance to Operational Requirements
(not just design parameters) - conformance to specified standards
- documentation of measures used
- activity logs
- quarterly reviews/inspections
- cumulative data collection including all of the
above, and more - to green performance standards
42LEED-NC 2.1 Credits for Sustainable SitesWater
EfficiencyEnergy and AtmosphereMaterials and
ResourcesIndoor Environmental QualityDesign and
Innovation
43Sustainable Sites -- 8 Credits, 14 Points
- Prerequisite Erosion and Sedimentation Control
- Credit 1 Site Selection
- Credit 2 Urban Redevelopment
- Credit 3 Brownfield Redevelopment
- Credit 4 Alternative Transportation (4 points)
- Credit 5 Reduced Site Disturbance -- Protect
Open Space (2 points) - Credit 6 Stormwater Management
- Credit 7 Landscape and Exterior Design to Reduce
Heat Islands (2 points) - Credit 8 Light Pollution Reduction
44Sustainable Sites LEED EB-NC Comparison
- Credits adapted in a manner consistent with
building manager choices rather than developer
choices (except for Brownfield Redevelopment
credit -- not available) - Major change is replacement of Site Selection
credit with a credit for Green Site Building and
Exterior Management - To keep it functional (some green solutions
require more (or different) maintenance) - to Reduce Impact on Local Environments
- Low Impact Chemical/Fertilizer/ Pest Management
45Sustainable Sites LEED EB-NC Comparison
- For certain credits, adaptedmeans they still do
have teeth in them - If it wasnt done at time of construction, you
get credits for doing it as a major upgrade - e.g.. Alternative transportation -- do it now
(implement a shuttle), or acceptable alternative
with a measure (telecommuting) - For certain credits, keep it so
- - restore (or maintain) to/in natural state
- Certain Credits simplified for easier measurement
- Policies, logs, measurements or quarterly
inspections / reviews required for most credits
46LEED-NC 2.1 Credits for Sustainable SitesWater
EfficiencyEnergy and AtmosphereMaterials and
ResourcesIndoor Environmental QualityDesign and
Innovation
47Water Efficiency 3 Credits5 Points
- Credit 1 Limit (50) or eliminate the use of
potable water for landscape irrigation
(2 points) - Credit 2 Reduce wastewater 50
- Credit 3 Water Use Reduction, 20 - 30
(2 points)
48Water Efficiency LEED EB-NC Comparison
- All credits applicable but reworded in a manner
consistent with building manager choices rather
than developer choices - Major change is addition of 2 Prerequisites for
- A. Minimum Water Efficiency
- Requires water efficient fixtures or equivalent
- B. Discharge Water Compliance
- Requires removal or filtration of in-building
generated discharges like oil and grease
49Water Efficiency LEED EB-NC Comparison
- Water Use reduction Credit similar to LEED-NC but
from a different baseline - But, quarterly and annual water meter data is
continuously required to prove that the initial
target continues to be met for all Water
Efficiency credits
50LEED-NC 2.1 Credits for Sustainable SitesWater
EfficiencyEnergy and AtmosphereMaterials and
ResourcesIndoor Environmental QualityDesign and
Innovation
51Energy and Atmosphere 6 credits
- Prerequisite 2 Minimum Energy Performance
- Requirements Comply with ASRAE/IESNA Standard
90.1 -1999 - Credit 1 Optimize Energy Performance
- (1 to 10 points)
-
- Requirements Reduce design energy cost by up to
60 for new buildings (50 for existing
buildings)
52Energy and Atmosphere17 points
- Strategies
- Energy Modeling - a must!
- Harvest free resources such as daylight,
ventilation cooling and solar heating - Maximize HVAC efficiency
- Relax tight temperature requirements
- Occupancy sensors
- Proper building orientation and fenestration
- High performance lighting
- Digital energy management control system
- Proper insulation ...
53Energy and Atmosphere
- Prerequisite (and Credit 3) Building Systems
Commissioning - Credit 5 Measurement and Verification
- Credit 2 On Site Renewable Energy
- -- up to 15 (up to 3 points)
- Credit 6 Green Power -- 50
- Prerequisite 2 No CFCs in HVACR Equipment
- Credit 4 Ozone Protection-- N0 HCFCs
- Teknion products are CFC and HCFC free
-
54Energy and Atmosphere LEED EB-NC Comparison
- Credits reworded in a manner consistent with
building manager choices rather than developer
choices (e.g. Energy Star vs. ASHRAE 90.1) - Building Commissioning, Measurement and
Verification Credits expanded and beefed up to
include, among other items, Owners Operational
Requirements and continuous measurable actions to
meet those requirements - Requirements for most credits expanded, made more
precise, and more measurement-based rather than
design based (e.g Ozone Protection)
55Energy and Atmosphere LEED EB-NC Comparison
- Ozone Protection Example)
- You dont have to replace equipment to eliminate
CFCs and HCFCs if uneconomic and you can
measure and control leakage - Additional Credit (1 to 3 Points) for Building
Operations and Maintenance - Staff Education
- Best Practices Preventive Maintenance Program
- Continuous Tracking and Optimization of Indoor
Environmental Quality - to green performance standards
56Energy and Atmosphere LEED EB-NC Comparison
- Additional Credit for Emission Measurement,
Control, and Continuous Improvement - Additional Credit for Documenting Sustainable
- Building Operating Cost Impacts
- On Site and Off Site Renewable Energy Credits
rationalized (Canada?)
57LEED-NC 2.1 Credits for Sustainable SitesWater
EfficiencyEnergy and AtmosphereMaterials and
ResourcesIndoor Environmental QualityDesign and
Innovation
58Materials and Resources 7 credits 13 points
- Prerequisite 1 Facilitate Storage and Collection
of Recyclables - Requirements Provide an easily accessible area
that serves the entire building dedicated to the
separation, collection and storage of materials
for recycling - Dovetails with ISO 14001
- Teknion is the first North American Furniture
Manufacturer to have all of its major facilities
(in Canada and the US) ISO 14001 certified
59Materials and Resources 7 credits
- Credit 1 Building Reuse Maintain 100 of Shell
Structure and 50 of Non Shell/Non Structure (1
to 3 points) - Material reuse in the same building
- Credit 3 Resource Reuse for at least 5 (or 10)
of building materials.(1 or 2 points) - Material reuse in another facility
- Credit 2 Construction Waste Management -- Divert
50 - 75 from Landfill (1 or 2 Points) - Covers sale to recycler or refurbisher (or to
third party as used)
60Materials and Resources
- One way or another, reuse or repurposing exiting
building elements (including furniture and walls
can gain credit for at least one of the above
categories. - Building elements reused are additive, so any
contribution by an applicable item can help bring
the requirement above threshold - Furniture (and relocatable walls) can contribute
to all of these categories, and substantially
contribute on a case by case basis (particularly
Resource Reuse)
61Materials and Resources
- Strategies Since multiple building elements can
be combined for these credits, use Integrated
Design Process to identify all candidate building
elements at the outset of the project --
holistically -- not sequentially - Consider applying for Design Innovation credits
for selecting such systems for minimizing waste
for future renovations - -- Relocatable Walls, such as Teknions Altos,
for example
62Materials and Resources
- Credit 4 Recycled Content 5 (or 10) --
post-consumer plus 1/2 post industrial (1
or 2 points) - Strategies
- Use as a guideline and not as a rule in all
cases. Materials high in recycled content may
have reduced lifetime, or other less desirable
attributes. Or they may not. - Recommended best practice Select the best
materials for the job, with an eye to recycled
content. - Recycled content has a vote, not a veto.
63Materials and Resources
- Teknions Steel Products, on average, contain a
recycled material content of 65, of which 50 on
average, or more, is post industrial recycled
material. - Panel Fabrics are primarily polyester material,
with up to 100 recycle content (post
industrial). Panel fabrics are available with up
to 78 post-consumer recycled material content.
64Materials and Resources
- Teknions Particle Board of 100 recovered and
recycled wood content, 60 post-industrial
material content. - MDF is 100 post-industrial recycled wood
material. - Seating Fabrics are available with 100 recycled
material content (post-industrial). - Tentest sound insulation material comprised of
100 post-consumer recycled cardboard.
65Materials and Resources
- Here too items are additive (by cost) so any
contribution by an applicable item, including
Furniture, can help bring the requirement above
threshold. - Make sure all recycled content is properly
accounted for. Ask the suppliers to provide both
post-industrial and post-consumer data as
required. - Teknion is committed to supplying recycled
content data, square footage data and volume data
as required to support calculations for Credits,
1, 2, 3 and 4
66Materials and Resources
- Credit 5 Regional Materials (1 or 2 points)
- Requirements Use a minimum of 20 of building
materials and products that are manufactured
regionally within a radius of 500 miles.
Manufactured means final assembly. - ( 1 point)
- Of those materials manufactured locally, use a
minimum of 50 extracted, harvested or recovered
regionally (1 point) - Teknion will provide required data for clients
located within 500 miles of Teknions final
assembly plants
67Materials and Resources
- Credit 6 Rapidly Renewable Materials - 5
- (1 point)
- Requirements Materials to come from plants that
are typically harvested within a 10 year cycle or
shorter. - Teknion is finalizing plans to offer Strawboard
products in 2004, and will provide the necessary
data for customers purchasing those products to
the contribution made from other building elements
68Materials and Resources
- Credit 7 Certified Wood (1 point)
- Requirements Use a minimum of 50 of wood-based
materials certified in accordance with the Forest
Stewardship Councils Principles - Flooring, finishes and furnishings included
- Teknion is finalizing plans to offer Certified
Wood products in 2004, and will provide the chain
of custody certificates for customers purchasing
those products
69Materials and Resources LEED EB-NC Comparison
- Credits reworded in a manner consistent with
building manager choices rather than developer
choices - 2 Additional Recycling Prerequisites for Source
Reduction and Waste Stream Management as well as
mercury reduction in light bulbs - Reused, recycled, local content, FSC certified
wood and rapidly renewable credits rationalized
into a single credit with 5 points
70Materials and Resources LEED EB-NC Comparison
- Environmental Preferable Purchasing (EPP)
Policies maximizing reuse as defined above to
cover at least the following product groups - office paper, office equipment, furniture,
furnishings, and building materials over 100. - Additional 2 points for purchasing IAQ Compliant
products for 45 of usage under EPP Policies
covering - paint and coatings, adhesives, sealants, carpet,
composite panels, agrifiber products, and
building materials over 100.
71Materials and Resources LEED EB-NC Comparison
- Up to 3 points for purchasing Cleaning products
that are Compliant to Green Seal GS-37, and
California Code of Regulations for maximum VOC
levels and EPA guidelines for - cleaning products, disposable janitorial
products and trash bags involving purchases over
100. - Up to 3 additional points for Occupant Recycling
of up to 50 of the total waste stream
72LEED-NC 2.1 Credits for Sustainable SitesWater
EfficiencyEnergy and AtmosphereMaterials and
ResourcesIndoor Environmental QualityDesign and
Innovation
73Indoor Environmental Quality8 Credits, 15 Points
- Prereq. 1 Minimum Indoor Air Quality (IAQ)
- Prereq. 2 Tobacco Smoke Control
- Credit 5 Indoor Chemical and Pollutant Source
Control - Credit 1 CO2 Monitoring Requirements
- Credit 2 Ventilation Effectiveness
- Credit 3 Construction IAQ Management Plan --
During Construction and After (but Before
Occupancy) (1 or 2 points) - IAQ Testing according to EPA Triangle Park
Protocol - Building full of Teknion Greenguard Certified
System met above standard (Georgia Tech)
74Indoor Environmental Quality
- Credit 4 Low Emitting Materials(4 points)
- Adhesives and Sealants
- Paints and Coatings
- Carpet
- Composite Wood (no added urea-formaldehyde)
- Addressed by Teknions Strawboard plan
- Strategy Apply for an additional Design
Innovation point for Greenguard Certified
Furniture. - (latest LEED Credit Interpretations for LEED-NC
suggest this. Greenguard Certification already
accepted in LEED-CI) -
75Indoor Environmental Quality
- Teknion was the first furniture manufacturer to
have all of its product lines Greenguard
Certified in 2003. - Greenguard is the accepted standard for furniture
in LEED-CI. - In Canada, the Ecologo Certification is an
accepted standard in the LEED Canada draft (as
well as Greenguard). - Ecologo certification protects the manufacturers
employees as well from the deleterious effects of
poor air quality. - Teknion is the only furniture manufacturer with
Environment Canadas Ecologo certification
76Indoor Environmental Quality
- The USGBC is evaluating offering a credit for No
PVCs based upon intense lobbying by Single
Issue environmental groups. - No PVCs is beginning to appear as a blanket
requirement for health care clients right now --
for all products -- not just those products
that are used in the treatment of patients. - Teknion is currently investigating plans for
addressing the issue, and is currently creating a
response to those situations we are encountering.
77Indoor Environmental Quality
- Credit 6 Individual Control of Airflow,
Temperature and Lighting Systems (1 or 2 points) - Credit 7 Thermal Comfort (1 or 2 points)
- Credit 8 Daylight and Views (1 or 2 points)
- Requirements
- Furniture systems designed at the outset of the
building design can maximize the ability of
occupants to benefit from windows, provide task
lighting, and enhance air flow.
78Indoor Environmental Quality LEED EB-NC
Comparison
- Credits reworded and made more measurable in a
manner consistent with building manager choices
rather than developer choices - Low Emitting Materials credits removed because
already addressed in EPP Policies under Materials
and Resources - Prerequisites added for Asbestos Removal and
Encapsulation and for PCB removal - Credit added for Contemporary IAQ Practice
- Simplified Individual Controllability of Systems
credit (lighting, temp., air flow)
79Indoor Environmental Quality LEED EB-NC
Comparison
- Credit added for Documenting Productivity Impact,
including Absenteeism and Healthcare Costs (2
points) - Credit added for Green Cleaning (7 points)
- entryway systems, isolation of janitorial
closets, isolation of high volume copying rooms,
low environmental impact cleaning policy, low
env. impact pest management policy (2), low env.
Impact cleaning equipment policy - Upgraded Thermal Comfort Standard (2004 vs 1992)
80Indoor Environmental Quality LEED EB-NC
Comparison
- Upgraded and Strengthened Daylighting and Views
Credits - Double the number of points (up to 4)
- Views Space Churn Renovation Plan required
identifying how to achieve direct line of sight
to vision glazing from 90 of the occupied spaces - Can be achieved in 2 steps 45 and 90
81LEED-NC 2.1 Credits for Sustainable SitesWater
EfficiencyEnergy and AtmosphereMaterials and
ResourcesIndoor Environmental QualityDesign and
Innovation
82Design Innovation2 Credits, 5 Points
- Credit 1 Innovation in Design (1 to 4 points)
- additional points for
- exceptional performance above requirements set in
the standard, - and/or
- innovative performance outside the green
building categories specifically addressed by the
standard.
83Design Innovation2 Credits, 5 Points
- Teknion will assist in obtaining Design
Innovation Credits that apply to the clients
individual situation. - Teknion will participate in the design process to
the extent feasible. A Teknion LEED Accredited
Professional will review the proposed design and
recommend how furniture could be used both to
meet the intent of a sustainable building as well
as contribute to additional LEED points if
certification is being pursued.
84Design Innovation LEED EB-NC Comparison
- No change in Design innovation credit.
- Requirement for LEED-EB Accredited Professional
(separate exam, not yet available) - Interim alternative -- LEED-NC Accredited
Professional having attended a full day LEED-EB
training course (not yet available)
85LEED CI-NC Brief - Comparison
- Points for selection of building with LEED
attributes - A point for a long term lease
- Greenguard Approved Furniture included in (I)EQ
section - Suggested innovation categories for
- acoustic performance
- education of occupants
- community development
- lifecycle analysis of material choices
86Bibliography
A wide range of both print and web sources can be
found at the following sites http//www.usgbc.or
g/Resources/research.asp http//www.bdcmag.com/mag
azine http//www.cbe.berkeley.edu/RESEARCH/researc
h-pubs.htm http//web.uflib.ufl.edu/afa/bcn/web.ht
mGreen http//www2.fpm.wisc.edu/campusecology/Doc
s/Sust20Web20Resources.htm http//www.eere.energ
y.gov/femp/techassist/softwaretools/softwaretools.
htmlblcc Many many more sources are listed in
the LEED Reference Guide