Robert Murray at Build Boston
A very interesting lunchtime presentation at Build Boston by Robert Murray, Vice President, Economic Affairs at McGraw-Hill. Some notes of interest related to the sustainable building, green building, and building trends/predictions in general:
- Green building as a part of construction trends is starting to effect the macroeconomic picture. This earned a few slides in the Powerpoint. Great to hear!
- He noted that the Energy Policy Act of 2005 has had an effect on conservation efforts. It also has spurred a boom in ethanol plant construction (we'll let you decide if that's good or bad, particularly if it's corn-based as opposed to cellulose ethanol).
- Downtown redevelopment projects are helping the macroeconomic picture—due to continued emphasis on restoring existing structures, brownfields, etc.
- "Green News," as he put it, includes a federal executive order (January '07) setting environmental goals for federal agencies: 30% reduction in energy use by 2015... 3% per year.
- Big-ticket items on college campuses will continue into 2008; predicting 232 msf (+4% increase) in educational buildings. Not to sound negative, but detention facilities were up 15% in 2006. Hope they're green as well.
- Renovation of existing housing stock will be a growing trend. (Will this include sustainable design? College projects I've seen have, but the renovation market is not something I've checked. Anyone know?)