 
Proposed Requirements in LEED 2012 Will Allow
Fenestration Products to Qualify in More Places
November 9, 2011
By Sahely Mukerji, smukerji@glass.com
The U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC) is in the process of developing
the Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) 2012 criteria,
and some of the proposed changes could impact the glass industry.
"For the most part, there are a number of positive changes
in the proposed LEED 2012 requirements," says Thomas D. Culp,
president of Birch Point Consulting in La Crosse, Wis. "There
is an increased ability to take credit for renewable energy, including
photovoltaics (PV), - both onsite and offsite."
There are a number of significant changes in the materials side,
he says. "The certified wood credit has been expanded to give
credit for other responsibly sourced materials including aluminum
and glass, as long as the raw materials come from sources under
the Framework for Responsible Mining.
"Also, primary aluminum and glass are currently mostly shut
out of the regional material credit, because the raw materials -
bauxite, silica, etc. - rarely come from within 500 miles of the
jobsite, but this credit is now being transformed into a 'Support
for Local Economy' credit based on the final products manufactured
and purchased locally," Culp says. "This will allow fenestration
products to now qualify in more places."
According to the USGBC website, LEED 2012 will focus on increasing
the technical rigor of the rating system and expanding the market
sectors that are able to use LEED. It will have new credit categories,
changed technical content and a revised point distribution system.
The proposed technical changes are based on market data, stakeholder-generated
ideas, expert engagement, and advances in technology and market
acceptability of LEED and green building practices.
"LEED 2012 has gone through two public comment periods, and
will go into member ballot" possibly late next summer, says
Ashley Katz, media manager at USGBC in Washington, D.C.
"As the LEED certification program continues to evolve, the
program should greatly benefit by making it more technical and transparent,"
says David Warden, enerGfacade brand manager for YKK AP in Austell,
Ga. "Providing transparency to the data will allow design professionals
to incorporate proven, validated strategies in future building designs.
In addition, updating the program to be more technical will help
focus strategies on more performance based concepts and allow manufacturers
of building products to precisely support the design community with
the proper metrics used to evaluate each product's performance."
Click
here for more information on LEED 2012.
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