We are working with Builders who are embracing ENERGY STAR and would like to exceed it. In SW Washington we have about 40% of the new homes ES certified. Several builders want to stand out from the crowd. We offer a HERS rating combined with our Energy Guide which seems to help. However, several builders also want to make a jump to more "green homes". The NGBS program seems to be administration heavy and most builders have decided it is too much paperwork, doesn't offer much creativity and flexibility, & the learning curve too expensive. We have noticed some simpler programs but they seem to be faux green homes. We'd like to offer a builder friendly green option that will help the builders sell more homes and also offer the green benefits to the home buyers without pricing the houses out of the market. Do we need to invent our own "green program" or is there an existing program that meets these needs?
Tags: Energy, Green, NGBS, Star, best, building, practices
Some of what you want may be here (passive house, US). There's a conference in D.C. at the end of this month.
Permalink Reply by Paul Scheckel on October 3, 2011 at 1:25pm Dallas adopted a green building program that states, "New construction will also have to be certifiable by USGBC LEED™, Green Built Texas™, or an equivalent green building standard." Equivalent standards have to be submitted for approval.
http://www.dallascityhall.com/building_inspection/greenBuilding.html
Permalink Reply by Sean Lintow Sr on October 3, 2011 at 5:24pm
Permalink Reply by John Nicholas on October 3, 2011 at 7:09pm Add EPA Indoor Air Plus. You have a choice for one of 2 checklists on moisture with ES 3.0. Offer both. What products do you builders by that are local? Pick a % and demo it. Green because you don't truck it in from 2000 miles away.
Try an advanced framing approach. Or take the 2012 code and see what you can do to get ahead of the game.
Not actual Green Bldg Certified Programs, more along with rolling your own.
Permalink Reply by Kent Mitchell on October 5, 2011 at 9:55pm
Permalink Reply by Tom on October 6, 2011 at 8:41am There's Minergie, if you feel like learning German or French and doing penance for the suffering inflicted on your European brethren who are having to decode and implement LEED abroad. ;)
Minergie is a great standard though. And rumor has it they're looking to help American projects so as to get a foothold here.
Tangentially related, and what I hoped this thread was going to be about when I saw the title - - This past weekend at Home Depot I noticed CEE tiers listed on appliance informational display cards. Totally awesome.
(though not useful for whole-home Energy Star, of course)
Permalink Reply by Elizabeth Stuart on October 7, 2011 at 11:21am There's also GreenPoint Rated in California:
http://www.builditgreen.org/greenpoint-rated/
Folks at Build It Green are more than happy to talk with folks in other states who might want to adopt a version of the program.
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