The
green building rating system revamp provides more grounding in
science and promotes strategies with the greatest environmental
benefit.
Since its launch in 1998, the Leadership in Energy and Environmental
Design (LEED) program has become widely accepted as the standard
measure of sustainability for buildings. To date, almost 21,000
projects, representing more than 5 billion square feet, have
registered their intent to seek certification under the system.
Another sign of the program's success is the long list of municipalities,
state governments, and federal agencies that have adopted LEED,
incorporating it into construction guidelines, legislation, and
requirements for incentive programs.
Along
with this market acceptance have come the inevitable growing
pains.
Users complain about confusing documentation requirements
and project review delays, while some critics say that the system,
developed through a consensus process, is not backed by enough
hard science. Although its creator, the U.S. Green Building Council
(USGBC), has done much to respond to these criticisms as it developed
and expanded LEED in recent years, it is now in the process of
an extensive overhaul-one that it hopes will maintain the program's
rate of market uptake while advancing its technical rigor. "We
were cognizant that LEED works now, but that it could work better," says
Brendan Owens, USGBC vice president of LEED technical development.
The revamp initiative, which the council refers to as LEED version
3.0, or LEED v3, has several components: revisions to the green
building rating system, updates to the online tool that supports
project certification, and changes to administration of the certification
process. It also includes a new program for accrediting the professionals
who work on LEED buildings.
At
press time, LEED 2009 (the title given to the rating system component
of
the v3 effort) was set to go live on April 27. And
when long-time users register new projects, they may notice adjustments
intended to more closely align the many rating systems that fall
under the LEED rubric, including a version targeted at operations
and maintenance, called LEED for Existing Buildings; one tailored
to the design and construction of speculative buildings, known
as LEED for Core & Shell, and the oldest and most widely used
system, LEED for New Construction. This "harmonization" process
includes revising similar credits in the various systems so that
they cite the same standards and use the same language. This change
should make LEED more user-friendly, especially for people who
work on multiple projects of diverse types simultaneously. "A
personal frustration has been the subtle differences between credits
with the same title and the same intent," says Joel McKellar,
Assoc. AIA, a researcher at Charlotte, N.C.-based LS3P and author
of the blog reallifelleed.com.
As part of the effort to provide consistency, LEED 2009 moves
to a 100-point scale, with regional and innovation credits providing
an opportunity for projects to earn up to 110 points. Previously,
the individual rating products each had their own point totals.
For example, LEED for New Construction, LEED for Schools, and LEED
for Commercial Interiors, were based on 69-point, 79-point, and
57-point scales, respectively. LEED 2009 also introduces uniform
certification thresholds across all the rating systems. Projects
that earn 40 points will qualify for certification at the lowest
level. A minimum of 50 points is required for Silver certification,
60 points for Gold, and 80 for Platinum, the highest level of certification.
The
alignment of the individual rating systems, along with the new
thresholds
and the introduction of the 100-point scale, should
simplify the documentation and certification process. In addition,
they also help establish a framework that can accommodate more
building types and market-specific requirements over time. However,
the goals of the overhaul are more ambitious than streamlining
and rationalizing the system. The larger aim was to provide incentives
for project teams to deploy those strategies with the greatest
potential for environmental or human-health-related benefit, with
greenhouse-gas reduction at the top of the priority list. "LEED
2009 emphasizes the critical issues of energy, transportation,
and water, and makes them the most important," says Rand Ekman,
AIA, director of sustainability at OWP/P, Chicago.
This
prioritization is achieved by redistributing points among the
various LEED credits
to emphasize some over others. To formulate
this reallocation, USGBC staff, committees, and consultants started
with an inventory of 13 aftereffects of human activity created
by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and known as "TRACI." Short
for "Tool for the Reduction and Assessment of Chemical and
Other Environmental Impacts," TRACI includes categories such
as fossil-fuel use, ozone depletion, and global warming.
Next in the reallocation process was prioritization of the TRACI
categories. To assign a relative importance to each, the LEED 2009
team relied on a tool developed by the National Institute for Standards
and Technology (NIST). Ultimately, the council created a matrix
that established the relationship between existing LEED credits
and the TRACI categories. The matrix served as the basis of a spreadsheet
for calculating the number of points each credit is worth.
Energy and transportation credits came out as big point winners
in this analysis, primarily because of the importance assigned
to controlling carbon emissions. For example, strategies intended
to increase energy efficiency and the reliance on renewable power
generated on-site can earn projects up to 26 points, versus 13
when compared to the previous LEED for New Construction. A location
close to public transportation, which also has the potential to
reduce occupants' energy use, counts for six points, up from only
one in the old system.
Some credits with a less direct link to slowing global warming
also have heavier emphasis in LEED 2009. For example, ambitious
water conservation goals can help garner as many as 10 points,
double the number previously available.
The
reallocation process also involved some value judgments along
with the weighting
exercise. Partly because of gaps in the data,
strict application of the TRACI-NIST tool would have made some
credits worth almost nothing, especially for the categories of
indoor air quality and human health. But it was important to the
LEED 2009 development team to retain the existing credits, even
those associated with relatively small environmental benefit. So
all are assigned at least one point in the new system. The approach
keeps the structure of the rating system intact and should make
it seem familiar to users accustomed to the preceding versions
of LEED. "It is an elegant solution," says Scot Horst,
the USGBC's senior vice president of LEED. "The scorecard
doesn't look that different."
However,
review of the new rating system does reveal a few significant
credit
adjustments. For example, LEED previously awarded points
for indoor water-use reduction beyond 20 percent when compared
to a "baseline," or code-compliant, building. But in
the new system, this savings level becomes a prerequisite. Projects
earn no points for satisfying this performance minimum, but those
that do not comply will not be eligible for certification. To earn
points for efficient indoor water use, projects must achieve at
least a 30 percent reduction. These new water thresholds are achievable
and appropriate, according to Anica Landreneau, Assoc. AIA. "It
is possible to reach 40 to 50 percent savings with fixture selection
alone," adds Landreneau, sustainable-design-practice leader
in HOK's Washington, D.C. office.
Another notable change is the introduction of regional credits.
For the first time, the rating system will take into account environmental
issues important in projects' specific locations. Working with
its local chapters and affiliates, the USGBC has identified credits
that address the priorities of given environmental zones. Projects
will be able to earn a maximum of four bonus points on top of the
base 100 for achieving these preselected credits. For example,
projects in rural areas of Michigan can earn extra points for preserving
agricultural land, reducing light pollution, and minimizing storm-water
runoff into the Great Lakes.
The council considers this bonus-point approach as an interim step.
It hopes to eventually incorporate the regional priorities into
the body of the rating system. "But this is two or three
versions down the road," according to Owens.
One aspect of LEED 2009 should help the USGBC with a long-term
goal of better understanding the relationship between credits and
building performance. As part of project registration, teams will
need to agree to report postoccupancy energy and water use. There
will be a number of ways to fulfill this provision, including participation
in the existing buildings program, which has a performance measurement
requirement, or signing a waiver that would allow the USGBC to
obtain the information directly from the utility company. The council
hopes to use the data to perform studies like the somewhat controversial
one it commissioned from the New Buildings Institute (NBI). Completed
in March 2008, the NBI analysis determined that energy use in LEED
buildings is 25 to 30 percent better than the national average.
However, it also showed large variations among individual buildings.
According to one of the study's analyses, 25 percent of the participating
projects had better than expected performance, while 21 percent
showed performance that was below the code baseline.
The
study also highlights a problem that is just as important as
its findings:
the difficulty of collecting performance data.
NBI's examination is based on 22 percent of the 552 buildings that
had been certified under LEED for New Construction Version 2, through
December 2006. Only these 121 projects were able to supply the
full-year of postoccupancy energy numbers required for participation
in the study. Collecting the data for even this small pool of projects
required "an extraordinary level of effort," according
to Owens. The hope for the new reporting requirement is that it
will "automate the collection of data to inform the future
development of the rating system," he says.
The
LEED v3 launch also includes an improved tool for managing the
project
registration and certification process electronically.
The council, in collaboration with software companies Adobe and
SAP, developed the application in response to complaints that the
system's predecessor is slow, buggy, and prone to frequent crashes. "The
USGBC staff uses it on a daily basis, so we are aware of its shortcomings," says
Mike Opitz, USGBC vice president of LEED development. System designers
also sought input from other frequent users, such as project administrators
and reviewers, he says.
The
new LEED Online, which will be available for use only in conjunction
with
LEED 2009 projects (those registered under previous versions
of LEED will be required to continue to use the older online system),
represents an investment of "several million dollars," says
Opitz. In addition to providing improved speed and reliability,
the application is designed to facilitate communication between
the reviewer and the project team, according to the council.
Along with the revamp of the rating system and the online application,
LEED v3 includes an overhaul of the project certification process
and the program for qualifying LEED Accredited Professionals (AP).
In conjunction with the v3 launch, the USGBC officially moves administration
of the certification and AP programs to the Green Building Certification
Institute (GBCI), a nonprofit organization spun off from the USGBC
in late 2007. The council will continue to manage the development
of the rating system, the online tool, and related resources such
as educational offerings.
For
the certification piece, GBCI will manage 10 organizations, including
Underwriters
Laboratories and Lloyd's Register Quality
Assurance, which will in turn oversee the project review process.
Under the old system, all LEED project submissions were reviewed
by the USGBC with the support of independently contracted reviewers.
According to USGBC and GBCI, the administrative restructuring should
eliminate the review and certification delays that have long plagued
the LEED program. In addition, the two organizations say the changes
will bring the program in line with the protocols of the International
Organization for Standardization (ISO) and the American National
Standards Institute (ANSI). Certification will "become a real
third-party process," says Horst.
Also
being closely watched by the green building community are the
coming
modifications to the AP program. The changes, which
will be phased in over the coming year, include introduction of
a three-tiered system of credentials. The lowest tier will be LEED
Green Associate. It is intended for people who want to demonstrate
a commitment to green building practices but may not be directly
involved in LEED projects. GBCI expects that this title will appeal
to nontechnical professionals, such as marketing staff in design
firms or lawyers involved in real estate development deals. The
second tier will be roughly the equivalent of the current AP credential,
but will include specialty tracks that correspond to the various
LEED rating systems. Finally, LEED Fellow, will designate an "elite" level
of expertise.
The
new credentialing is a response to concerns that passage of the
current multiple-choice
qualifying exam requires rote memorization
rather than a true understanding of green building practices and
principles. "The goal is to make sure that the credentials
are targeted and meaningful," says Peter Templeton, GBCI president.
Although GBCI is still developing the criteria for fellow status,
it has already outlined the requirements for the first two tiers
of accreditation. Earning the Green Associate credential will involve
passing an exam that will cover core concepts and the key points
of the LEED rating system. Qualification for the AP status will
have two steps: Candidates will be required to take the first-tier
exam as well as a test tailored to their chosen specialization.
In addition, AP hopefuls will have to demonstrate LEED project
experience. GBCI plans to institute continuing education requirements
for both designations-15 hours for Associates and 30 hours for
APs, biennially.
GBCI
hasn't yet provided the details of what kind of courses will
count,
except for noting that 6 of the 30 hours will need to be "LEED
specific." However, many observers expect that satisfying
the requirement will be relatively painless, at least for professionals
who participate in continuing education in order to maintain their
licenses. "For architects and engineers, there will be overlap," predicts
McKellar. "But from those [disciplines] that don't already
have to complete continuing education, there will be resistance," he
says.
With
regard to changes to the LEED program as a whole, the reaction
of seasoned
LEED users has been mostly positive. Many design consultants
say that the new system should not be a huge adjustment for project
teams. "Obviously there will be a learning curve," says
Rob Bolin, a senior vice president with mechanical engineering
firm Syska Hennessy, in Chicago. "However, if people are completing
LEED projects now, they will be able to continue to do so in the
future," he says.
Even
the recession, sources predict, should not be that much of a
factor in market
uptake. "The economy will hamper total
construction volume," according to OWP/P's Ekman. "But
it shouldn't change the percentage of projects that seek certification."
News
courtesy of BusinessWeek - Joann Gonchar, 5/18/2009