Title: Introduction to Green Buildings
1Introduction to Green Buildings LEED
2Defining Sustainability
- United Nations World Commission on Environment
and Development - Development that meets the needs of present
generations without compromising the ability of
future generations to meet their own needs.
3Defining Green Buildings
- Design and construction practices that
significantly reduce, or eliminate the negative
impact of buildings on the environment and its
occupants with regard to site planning
safeguarding water use and water use efficiency
promoting energy efficiency and renewable energy
conserving materials and resources and promoting
indoor environmental quality. (US Green
Building Council)
4Construction Impacts
- 76 million residential buildings in US
- 5 million commercial buildings in US
- consume 40 or raw materials
- 32 total energy produced
- 17 fresh water
- 25 global wood harvest
- 5 billion gals water/day just for toilets
- generates
- 25-40 of municipal solid waste from CD
- 50 of US CFC production
- 30 of US CO2 production
5Building Operations Impacts
- 49 of Sulfur Dioxide emissions
- 25 nitrous oxide emissions
- 10 of all particulate matter
- 1/3 of all energy consumption in US
- 2/3 of all electricity consumption in US
- disturbs natural habitats
- contaminates air, soil, and water
- depletes non-renewable resources
- ½ of greenhouse gases
- 35 of carbon dioxide emissions
- community issues
- occupant issues
- sources The Architecture of Sustainability,
2002, World Watch Institute, USGBC
6Key Issues and Benefits
- Institution
- Building Commissioning
- Air Quality
- Occupants productivity and well being
- Energy Conservation
- Water Conservation
- Storm Water Management
- Waste Management
- Local State Standards Programs
- Green ethics / commitment
- Research and Grant opportunities
- Being a leader (as it should)
- Responsibility to show importance
- Competitive advantage (ie recruiting)
- Institutional community demand
- Great public relations
7Overall Financial Benefits
- Energy
- Water
- Wastewater
- Reduced Waste
- Improved Indoor Environmental Quality
- Greater Employee Comfort/Productivity
- Reduced Employee Health Costs
- Lower Operation and Maintenance Costs
- Competitive First Costs
- Through integrated design synergies
- Increased Value ROI
- Marketing Advantage
- Reduced Liability
- Improve Risk Management
- Insurance costs
8Overall Financial Benefits
- Financial Benefits of a Green Building equate to
50-70 SF over lifetime - Over 10X return on any premium cost associated
with building it over lifetime - Source USGBC
9Air Quality
- Indoor Air Quality (IAQ) effect the contents of
the inside air has on a structure and its
occupants - People spend 90 of their time indoors
- Indoor air has 10-100X higher pollutants than
outdoor air - USEPA Indoor Air Quality Jan, 6 2003
10Energy Conservation
- US uses 25 of world energy but only has 5 of
population 95 of our energy is from fossil
fuels (US Energy Information Administration) - Higher Education - 2 Billion/year on energy
- (American School University)
- Most can reduce by up to 30 - savings can be
used on - New faculty
- Upgrades/renovations for more savings
- New programs
11Water Conservation
- USA uses 340 billion gallons of fresh water per
day - Nearly 65 is discharged into waterways
- Energy Policy Act of 1992
- Facilities can easily reduce use by 20-30 with
little cost and effort - Water Sewer Bills
- Connection Fees Tax Base
12Occupants Well Being and Productivity
- Relationship exists between worker
comfort/productivity and building
design/operation - Hidden sick days higher absenteeism,
respiratory ailments, allergies, asthma lower
productivity, higher insurance and medical costs - A 1 increase in productivity (about 5 minutes
per day) equals 600-700 per employee per year -
a 1.5 equals about 1,000/yr - (Katz 2003 study)
13Mythology About First Costs
- Common Perception when we started was 20-30
- Past Current Trend
- Recent Studies
- Average Premium lt2 or 3-5 SF
- Most of cost associated with increased
architectural and engineering design, time,
modeling and integration time - Earlier you integrate the lower the cost
14Mythology About First Costs
- Source USGBC, Capital E Analysis
15Mythology About First Costs
- Another recent study has shown the following
average increase in project construction costs,
on a percentage basis for LEED certification. - Certified 0 2.5
- Silver 0 3.3
- Gold 0.3 5.0
- Platinum 4.5 8.5
- Start Early Save Costs
- Source Sasaki Associates 2004
16Mythology About First Costs
- Building green can be done for no additional cost
- Initial premium costs are entirely up to you and
project specific - LEED buildings average only a 2-3 increase in
costs, but can be done for the same budget as
traditional buildings with planning - Savings from green buildings more than return
any premium you may choose to put into it - Design Fees will be higher but construction costs
may be reduced - Set Budget first then work fees within framework
17General Mythologies
- Appearance of Green Buildings
- You design it to look how you want. It can
easily match traditional campus design or not. - Carpet, furniture and windows do not have to look
different. They can look like traditional ones
only they perform better and are healthier. - Does not need to be high tech to be green.
- Time
- Green Buildings take the same amount of time to
construct as regular buildings. More time may be
required in the Design phase though. - Costs
- Green Buildings do not have to cost more. With
planning they can be built at the same price or
less. - Design fees may be higher in the beginning of the
project but the extra design work will lower the
actual construction costs. In the end the
building costs the same and fits in the
traditional budget. - Normal 2 2 4
- Green 3 1 4
- Long term maintenance and operations costs can be
reduced by 20 50 with good planning.
18Green Buildings at USC
- West Quad Residence Hall Learning Center
- School of Public Health
- Library Rare Books Collection Modern Political
Wings - Law School
- New Honors College
- Gamma Phi Beta Sorority
- New Student Health Center
- Baseball Stadium
- Horizon Buildings
- Biomedical Buildings
- Arnold II
- Band/Dance Building
- Innovista
19West Quad
20West Quad
- 30.9M project cost - 25M const. cost
- 177,000 SF - 141.24/sf
- SAME COST Time
- 502 bed spaces 4 buildings
- Residential, office, academic retail spaces
- Goal of LEED Silver Achieved
- Reduced Construction Change Order Costs
- 45-55 More Energy Efficient over 50,000
savings annually - 20 more Water Efficient 3900 savings
annually - Residents comment on improved health and
productivity
21West Quad at USC
- Selected Green Project Particulars
- Designed to be 40 more energy efficient and to
use 20 less water - Green roof on Learning Center
- Fuel Cell for supplemental electricity hot
water - Solar pre-heating for domestic hot water
- Low VOC paints and carpets 100 Fresh Air
- Daylighting in all buildings
- Building orientation
- Light shelves for shading and natural lighting on
southern exposures - Light wells on Learning Center
- Green board in case good furnishings
- Total storm water management integration
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23US Green Building Council (USGBC)
- Leadership in Energy
- Environmental Design
- (LEED)
24- USGBCs MISSION
- to promote the design and construction of
buildings that are environmentally responsible,
profitable, and healthy places to live and work. - The organizations activities
- Integrate building industry sectors
- Lead market transformation
- Educate owners and practitioners
25- USGBC is...
- A national nonprofit organization
- A diverse membership of organizations
- Consensus-driven
- Committee-based product development
- Developer and administrator of the LEED Green
Building Rating System
26What is Green Design?
- Design and construction practices that
significantly reduce or eliminate the negative
impact of buildings on the environment and
occupants in five broad areas - Sustainable site planning
- Safeguarding water and water efficiency
- Energy efficiency and renewable energy
- Conservation of materials and resources
- Indoor environmental quality
27Leadership in Energy Environmental Design
A leading-edge system for designing,
constructing, operating and certifying the
worlds greenest buildings.
28Why Was LEED Created?
- Use as a design guideline
- Recognize leaders
- Stimulate green competition
- Establish market value with recognizable national
brand - Raise consumer awareness
- Transform the marketplace!
29Why Was LEED Created?
- Facilitate positive results for the environment,
occupant health and financial return - Define green by providing a standard for
measurement - Prevent greenwashing (false or exaggerated
claims) - Promote whole-building, integrated design
processes
30LEED-NC Market Transformation
- Registered Projects by State - Top 10
As of 05.02.05
All statistics exclude pilot projects
31LEED-NC Market Transformation
- Registered Projects by State - Top 10
- Where does the Southeast stand?
- Georgia 62
- South Carolina - 56
- North Carolina 42
32LEED-NC Point Distribution
Five LEED credit categories
33Resources
- www.usgbc.org US Green Building Council
- www.usgbc.org/Resources/links.asp - Extensive
Resource List - www.greenerbuildings.com
- The HOK Guidebook to Sustainable Design
- WWW.Oikos.com - bookstore
- www.iso.org ISO 14001 EMS
- www.epa.gov/ems/index.htm - EPAs EMS site
- www.doe.gov US DOEwww.epa.gov US EPA
- www.housing.sc.edu/westquadhandbook.asp - West
Quad Handbook - www.sc.edu/sustainableu - Sustainable
Universities Initiative (SUI) - www.buildinggreen.com Environmental Building
News - www.edcmag.com Environmental Design
Construction - www.gbapgh.org Green Building Alliance
- www.southface.org/web/earthcraft_house/ech_main/ec
h_index.htm - Earth Craft Homes - www.greenglobes.com Green Globes
34Contact Info
- Michael Koman Dr. Gene Luna
- Environmental Programs Manager Associate Vice
President - 1215 Blossom Street for Student Affairs
- Columbia, SC 29208 1215 Blossom St
- Columbia, SC 29208
- koman_at_sc.edu gene.luna_at_sc.edu
- 803-777-1986