Newsletter of the Committee on the Environment (COTE)
COTEnotes Summer 2008 AIA COTE
Of Living Buildings

by Sandy Wiggins

In a paper he presented at the Living Future Conference in April, Wiggins describes how the Living Building Challenge is pushing architects and engineers out of their individual comfort zones, daily remapping the boundaries of their knowledge and experience. It is pushing them to think and do in new ways.

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Top Ten Winner: New Occupant Survey
COTE commissioned occupant surveys of three Top Ten winners. The Center for the Built Environment at UC-Berkeley is performing these surveys, and the first one is now available—it’s a study of Sidwell Friends Middle School in Washington, DC, a project by Kieran Timberlake Architects. The first section is a high-level overview of the building’s performance. It contains basic metrics by category. Section two contains information at the question level. Section three contains information from and about the occupants.

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No Building Is An Island: A Look at the Different Scales of Energy
by Michelle Addington
Harvard Design Magazine aims to provide a forum for thoughtful and articulate practitioners, journalists, and academics, primarily from architecture, landscape architecture, and urban design and planning. Essays, images, discussions, book reviews, and recent projects appear regularly. Subscription information can be found on the magazine’s web site.

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Going Green: Strategies for Any Project
by Ted Shelton
The Journal of Green Building, the first publication to present practical articles and peer-reviewed research for the architect, builder, engineer, and all related professionals of the built environment, announces two free online tools for subscribers to their 2008 publishing season—Tips and Strategies on How to Successfully Implement LEED and Professors’ Green Picks. The first of these sections will offer helpful advice on earning points in various LEED categories; the second section will identify materials and technologies that yield superior sustainable performance. Subscription information for the Journal of Green Building can be found at the journal’s web site.

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Top Ten 2008 Winners:
PPTs, PDFs, and Web Site Resources

We celebrated the 2008 winners at the convention in Boston, both in a session and at an event at the EpiCenter (a 2007 Top Ten Winner), which was sponsored by NanaWall and GreenSource magazine.

GreenSource covered the Top Ten program in grand fashion this year—on the cover, chronicling the history of the program (founded in 1997), and devoting a full case study (http://greensource.construction.com/projects) to each of this year’s winners. Their lineup of writers tell the stories behind these benchmark projects.

As always, you can see the current (and past) Top Ten Green Projects Winners on the AIA Top Ten site. Did you know that you can also get a copy of the 2008 Top Ten PowerPoint presentation (or as a PDF here)? Additionally, the 2007 winners are available as 2- and 12-page case studies here.

Advancing Sustainable Design Around the Country
News from a selection of COTE chapters around the country

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A Proposal to Include Building in Carbon Trading Plans
by Huston Eubank

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Sharing for Strength, Changing the World:
Sustainable Design Leaders from Firms Gather to Share Best Practices

by Pauline Sousa, AIA

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An Introduction to the 50 to 50 Tool
by the AIA Sustainable Discussion Group

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Greening the AIA Honor Awards
by Anne Schopf and Henry Siegel

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AIA & USGBC Formalize the Collaboration
At summer’s start, the leaders and boards of the AIA and USGBC signed a letter of agreement to work together; AIA and COTE’s presence will be strong at Greenbuild this year as usual.

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Going to Greenbuild this year?
We’re hatching a plan for a COTE casual networking event on Wednesday, November 19, 6-8 PM. Come to Lucky’s Lounge on Congress Street (a short walk from the convention center) to meet COTE colleagues and share best practices about how your chapter is educating members, collaborating with USGBC and other allied organizations, and more.



 
 

Letter from the Chair
by Henry Siegel, FAIA

There were several great COTE events at the AIA convention in Boston. Read on for Henry's full report!

 
 

Ed Mazria publishes code equivalents for the 2030 Challenge; BuildingGreen reports.

Eco-Structure covers the EPA’s Energy Star program through the perspective of Karen Butler (a true friend of COTE).

Metropolis profiles John Todd after he was named the Buckminster Fuller Foundation’s first $100,000 Challenge Prize winner, for his proposal to restore more than a million acres of Appalachian land that have been impacted by coal mining.

The Sallan Foundation offers a report on advances in greening the operations of commercial buildings.

Have you checked out the AIA’s Soloso

Michael Crosbie writes in AIArchitect on the beauty imperative in sustainable design.

Check out these tips on building a green resource library by Kevin O’Donnell in Contract magazine.

Metropolis offers a glossary of sustainable design terms—a cogent stab at decoding the green lexicon.

Ralph L. Knowles, professor emeritus at USC School of Architecture, offers his research online through this design research project that graphs the effects of sunlight and gravity in three dimensions.

Check this Citiwire post from Anthony Flint on the imperative for adapting to climate change and how this will affect land planning thinking.

Metropolis talks with a progressive, green, and successful West Coast developer: Portland, Oregon-based Gerding Edlen.

Check out the green calendar at BuildingGreen.com published by BuildingGreen, an AIA partner. AIA members get a discount on memberships.

 
 

Join the COTE Forum list-serve, an open discussion about sustainable design issues that matter to architects and their allied professionals. Send an email to lyris@lyris.aia.org and and type “subscribe coteforum” in the subject line. You will receive an auto-reply; you must confirm to join. Your confirmation email will have instructions on how to adjust their preferences and more.

If you received this from a friend, join our list. To be added to the lists to receive COTEnotes, AIA members should send an email to Shaw Hubbard; non members should send the request to Kira Gould.

 

 

Off the Grid
by Lori Ryker


Green Building A to Z
by Jerry Yudelson

 

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