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Raise High the Green Beam, Carpenter

Why is green building still so hard?

By Auden Schendler
08 Jun 2006
Read more about: placemaking
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Recently, Colorado Company magazine highlighted a developer who believes in nothing but "green" building. It was a wonderful article, but it gets at an underlying question: why is this still a story?

The idea of green building has not spread like wildfire. The mass-market building sector is oblivious. Most of the structures in trade magazines like Architectural Digest aren't green. Last month, The New York Times ran an article in which Robert A.M. Stern, dean of Yale's architecture school, said, "I think the trouble with environmentalism is that at most architecture schools it's been confined to a dreary backwater of mechanical engineering." That is changing, the article reports, but not fast enough.

Photo: iStockphoto.
Still trying to get it nailed down.
Photo: iStockphoto.
Meanwhile, even good green builders often come up short. In the environmental building community here in Colorado, everyone's got a story of a disastrous effort: one that uses 10 times as much energy as it was supposed to; a micro-turbine that wasn't so cost-effective after gas prices spiked; a south-facing community college that needed its air conditioning retrofit in the winter.

Green building was supposed to be the road to the promised land, where good design meshed with stewardship for the benefit of all, while the bottom line remained intact. But if Moses were an architect, he would have come back from the mountain with 10 tablets of screw-ups and cover-ups.

So why is it so hard to build green? One response, of course, is that it isn't. In fact, there's a strong case to be made for a booming movement. Membership in the U.S. Green Building Council has grown to 6,000 since its founding in 1993. States and cities like Wisconsin, Seattle, and Portland, Ore., are adopting green building standards. There is reasonably strong federal action on the issue, if not at the level of the White House. And corporate leadership in the arena is expanding.

This all sounds good, until you look around. Try to buy a green home in any major subdivision in America, for instance -- it's as rare as a flower in the desert. Some of the reasons for the slow pace of the movement's growth are obvious: cost; cultural and structural resistance; lack of talent or expertise; lack of research, funding, and awareness; and perceived trade-offs between quality or security and sustainability. But there are two less obvious reasons to consider.

The first is that stakeholders are afraid to challenge the myth that green building is cheap and easy. Once you've gone through the process, you're scared to point out the warts, because your work is now a model, getting enormous publicity. But ultimately, the lack of willingness to admit failure prevents the industry from learning from its mistakes. Until that changes -- until there are conferences about mistakes and pitfalls, not brilliant successes -- the learning curve will remain flat.

As renowned green architect William McDonough said after Environmental Building News reported on problems with the environmental studies center he designed for Oberlin College, these are new projects. The point isn't that they work perfectly at first, it's that they eventually work well. And, I would add, that we learn as we go.

The second reason green building hasn't become more mainstream is that it's often discussed in a secret language, the code of a cabal. For instance, talk of "biomimicry" -- the idea that buildings should be modeled on natural systems -- is nearly inescapable. But as Michael Brown, an environmental consultant and editor at the Journal of Industrial Ecology, points out, biomimicry seems mainly to be about making something straightforward (avoid toxics, strive for closed loops, minimize energy) into something that requires a consultant.

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LEED, the U.S. Green Building Council's certification system, has its own cabal-like nature too. The message is, you have to know LEED if you want to build green. But LEED is not how you get a green building -- it's how you certify one. It is not a blueprint. If it's treated as one, then certification concerns begin to trump performance, and drive the process.

Here in Aspen, we're proposing new affordable housing that will run on lake-source heat pumps and use structural insulated panels. It would be very hard for this building not to beat energy code by 40 percent. We'll need things like passive solar orientation; envelope efficiency, including superinsulation and tightness; and an efficient and right-sized heating system. What we won't need is a consultant, a biologist, a Ph.D., or a translator.

Successful green buildings depend on talent and freedom: qualified engineers, architects, builders, and owners, preferably with some green experience, who are willing to take risks and try new things. The Eastgate Building in Zimbabwe, which self-shades and dumps heat at night, isn't successful because it looks like a cactus (though that doesn't hurt) -- it's successful because architect Mick Pearce is a genius, and someone gave him free reign, along with the help of a great engineering firm, Ove Arup.

But talent and freedom are in short supply. And that inevitably results in something that looks less like green building than business as usual, with a green consultant thrown in. On typical projects, the consultant -- to whom well-intentioned owners ascribe God-like qualities -- is charged with jury-rigging an already doomed process. By, for example, helping to document that a building's steel studs and rebar, which would have been used even in a "brown" project, are partly recycled, and contribute to making the building bona fide green. (This is something I've been guilty of when using LEED.) These kinds of decisions, in turn, lead to mediocre final results that are hailed as "successful blueprints" for the future, and whose mistakes are never analyzed.

Change takes time, of course. But we don't have time. Buildings are a major contributor to atmospheric carbon dioxide levels, and we have to cut those soon just to stabilize them at twice preindustrial levels. As NASA scientist James Hansen has said, unless we move aggressively to reduce emissions in the next decade, future generations will face life on a planet unrecognizable to us.

So it's well past time to think about how to speed up the adoption of green practices, and how to break down the barriers to a widespread green construction industry. We can't afford anything less.


Visit Gristmill to read the author's suggestions for how the green building process can be improved, and to add your own.

Read more about: placemaking
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Auden Schendler is director of environmental affairs at Aspen Skiing Company.
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Comments: (5 comments)

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If it's so great how come everyone's not doing it?

Auden--

Excellent points and I really like your redneck top 10.  I would like to add a couple wrinkles to the question of "If green building is so great, how come everyone's not doing it?"

The quick answer is habits and incentive.  First, let's say John Green wants to build a green home and has done his research, bought the land, gets a good artichoke and enginerd who design a great solar oriented well insulated home and get the big stuff right.  Then he goes to hire a general contractor.  These guys are the bulldogs, in the trenches, and experts in their field with years of experience.  Most tell me they think green building is great and they'll do whatever the owner wants, but when it comes down to it, my experience has been that they'll talk you out of just about everything you want to do outside conventional construction.  Oh yeah, and enginerds and architightwads are the butts of all their jokes.

Mr. Green: "We want to use ICFs for the foundation."  

Mr. Contractor: "Those things are crap, can't get `em straight, you'll blow `em out, better not do it.  You don't need to insulate your foundation here, it's the banana belt"

Green: "We want to do shallow frost protected foundation with fly-ash concrete"

Mr. C: "Huh? (spit)"

Green: "We want to use SIP panels for the exterior walls."

Mr. C: "Those are too expensive, takes too long to order, what if there's a mistake, the electrician won't like it, stud framing good enough anything beyond r-19 won't pay for itself....." It goes on from there.

Green: "We want a solar hot water system."

Mr. C: "I know a guy who put one in that totally broke after a few years and didn't work worth a shit.  It would be a complete waste of money and you'd be an idiot."

Green: "We want a radon mitigation system"

Mr. C: "That stuff is a bunch of hogwash you don't need to and we never put anything like that in."

Green: "Please recycle your beer cans and wood while drinking and working on our jobsite."

"Yeah, cool, ok.  Bottles and cans, clap your hands."  Actually everyone's on board with that one.

OK so my point is that I see the contractors as a huge piece in the equation who in my opinion have the most control in implementing this stuff (Other than code pricks and DRB Nazis).  Who am I to argue with them?  They're the experts in the field, they know what they're doing.  So you get talked out of it.  What started out as a green structure turns into something status quo and maybe you get lucky and use a little trex on the deck.  

Contractors have little if any incentive to build any differently than they do now.  They don't live in these houses or pay for the heating bills.  They've made good money doing what they do, they do it well, and anything that changes or threatens that throws in a level of uncertainty and concern.  Hey building houses is hard work, dealing with bitchy homeowners who want they're frikkin travertine slab counters and endless pool system in before Christmas, DRBs, code zealots, sub-standard subs, and climate change-induced chaotic weather patterns.

Educating homeowners is key but the hard part is we're programmed to buy the chrome package instead of paying attention to what's under the hood.  Even if you did there's no sticker on the window when you move in that tells you your miles per gallon.  When I talk to folks about R-values, thermal mass, boiler efficiencies and air infiltration, their eyes glaze over like Al Gore talking about global warming.  Dumb it down too much and you come up with some crappy pie chart in USA Today that says I can save the planet by turning down my thermostat and having someone look at my furnace to make sure it's running right.  I have to admit that even though on our project we're stoked to be able to do some good stuff, when I drive by a home built wrong but reasonably priced (is that possible?) it would be nice to just be able to move into something and not go through all the brain damage.

So anyway that's where a green building code works and comes in as a win-win.  Just raise the bar and make it required.  Contractors then would know how to build to code and know what to expect and how to do it.  Homeowners get a code-certified green building with better indoor air and saves them money with little additional upfront costs or headaches.  The community and environment benefit collectively from improved material use and reduced emissions.  Egotects are happy because there's still plenty of innovation and creativity built in to the code so they can come up with the latest eco-design and get written up in all the fancy magazines even if in the real world their design sucks.

Adam


Do not use contractors

I designed and constructed a green passive solar home with air-to-air heat exchangers, thermal mass, southern solar gain, hot water preheat, wood heat, and (very important) thick window shutters.  My one suggestion is to build the green building yourself.  Do not use contractors.  You save money, interest on the money, payroll, payroll taxes, IRS taxes on the money saved, and money using recycled materials.  

The home will last many centuries.  I hope the survivors of global warming enjoy the shelter.

location, location, location

No menion was made of where to build. This has a large impact. If you need to build a road into the woods to get to your new green house you might want to consider the impact of habitat fragmentation and edge effect. While everyone is off fighting the loggers sprawl is the leading cause of forest loss in the United States

Impediments to Residential Green Building

  1.  Material Supply Chain.  Lots of new technologies, products, applications and innovation hitting the market, little third party verification of product quality and reliability claims, and insufficient pull from consumers to create enough volume to drive manufacturing costs down.  Result:  10%-25% premium for building green.  You really have to want this!

  2.  Builders vs. Architects.  Any self-respecting architect these days is LEED certified or at least associated with those who are.  Finding builders who have the knowledge and experience with sustainable building materials (tough in many locations) is the critical piece.  Many want to learn, but if they haven't done it before, you'll be paying for their education, and risking the outcome of your project!  Opportunity:  There's a desperate need to educate builders, who smell cost increases when they hear the word green, about sustainable construction and materials.

  3.  Lagging Financial Infrastructure.  Lenders don't know how to assess value or risk of sustainable designs and materials (they're risk averse to begin with), and are therefore reluctant to embrace such projects.  Appraisers don't know how to place value on green building.  Realtors are clue-less and have been slow to respond to the rise in interest in the marketplace...in most locations, you can't sort the MLS for green-certified homes.

  4.  Competing Standards.  There are multiple and often confuisng and competing standards of what constitutes a green house."  Governmental organizations could clear the air by establishing building codes and standards that clarify and simplify. This would get a lot of builders on board, not to mention homeowners.

  5.  Accessible Standards.  When LEED released the Home standards, I called my architect, who designed our sustainable home currently under construction, and asked if the design would have achieved LEED status.  His response was, "ABsolutely YES...but you couldn't afford it!"  LEED, Green Globes, and all the other standards run the risk of burgeoning bureaucracy and complexity...reminds me of the Quality movement of the '80's...companies became so obsessed with chasing the Malcom Baldridge Award, they forgot why they were doing quality improvements in the first place!  Solution:  Make the standards affordable and reasonably simple.


Green Snowmaking

Hey Auden, I was hoping you could enlighten us as to how the Aspen Ski Company justifies making snow during an unseasonably warm and dry early winter?
Could it be that wasting energy to make snow is indeed part of the problem?

Jeff Maus

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