Boston mayor to require 'green' public buildings
The Boston Globe --Nov. 10
Nov. 10--Mayor Thomas M. Menino will require all new city government buildings to be "green" and will begin to push large private projects to be environmentally friendly as well.
More than a year ago, Menino created a Green Building Task Force, which has
just issued its findings, calling for new building standards for major projects,
training for city employees in green policies, and incentives for firms that
adopt pro-environment strategies, such as working with utilities to improve air
quality.
"This report did put out a very high achievable standard for the
city," said Mark Maloney, director of the Boston Redevelopment Authority.
"But it was a consensus built from the real estate and environmental
communities, and from residential and commercial developers."
The 22-person panel found that buildings consume about 40 percent of all
energy used in the nation, and the construction industry is the source of about
40 percent of the material in US landfills.
The report suggested developing public awareness programs to encourage
construction of efficient buildings, such as the George Robert White
Environmental Conservation Center in Mattapan, Boston's first green municipal
building, and Manulife Financial Corp.'s US headquarters in South Boston, the
largest and most recent structure built in the city with state-of-the-industry
energy-saving technology.
The report recommended that legislation be filed to create state and federal
tax credits for developers of green buildings, and said city officials would be
expediting approvals of developments that incorporate energy-saving measures
such as solar panels. The panel also suggested adopting a high-profile campaign
to promote green residential projects.
Companies are taking note.
The Red Sox, for instance, will be recycling materials in future construction
projects, chief executive Larry Lucchino said. And Keyspan, which supplies
natural gas to customers in the Northeast, pledged $250,000 for grants to
businesses and individual customers planning to take energy-saving measures,
chief executive Robert B. Catell said.
"More important than that is bringing our expertise," Catell said.
"We can provide advice, counsel, and engineering support to help people in
design or retrofitting of buildings to help them be cleaner or greener."
Boston has already given out two grants of about $20,000 each to promote
green building, under a program funded by the Massachusetts Technology
Collaborative. Third Sector New England, developing an office center for
nonprofit organizations, and the Dorchester Bay Economic Development
Corporation, which is building a community center on Bowdoin Street, each won
the money to help pay some of the additional up-front cost of incorporating
energy efficiencies, which are expected to save the organizations dollars in the
long term. The awards were made in August at the Artists for Humanity EpiCenter
in South Boston, itself a recently opened green building.
Although the points made in the mayor's task force report are
recommendations, Maloney said they have all been agreed to by the Menino
administration.
The task force acknowledged there are obstacles to using green-building
techniques -- notably initial cost. It also cited traditional ways of designing,
planning, and constructing buildings, in which the different professional teams
work separately, without the coordination needed to incorporate energy-efficient
techniques.
"Too often, when a developer or builder sets out to construct a green
building, many of the preferred building products come at a cost premium or are
not reasonably available," the report said.
But the report cited a number of successful projects, including Erie
Ellington Homes, a wood-frame Dorchester housing development built at a cost of
$97 per square foot, or about 25 percent below the average for the area.
Compared to a typical home built under state codes, those homes used 42
percent less space-heating energy, 27 percent less water-heating energy, 40
percent less water, and 59 percent less electricity after 1 years of operation,
the report said.
At the Maverick Gardens housing development in East Boston, the Boston
Housing Authority expects to save $100,000 a year in energy costs through the
use of solar panels, on-site power generation, fiberglass windows, and
energy-saving lighting and motors.
Maloney said public buildings in the city would seek the equivalent of a
Silver rating -- third from the highest -- under the Leadership in Energy and
Environmental Design system created by the nonprofit US Green Building Council.
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