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LEED v4.1
Existing Warehouses & Dist. Ctrs.
Materials and Resources
Facility Maintenance and Renovations Policy

LEED CREDIT

Warehouses-EBOM-v4.1 MRp2: Facility maintenance and renovations policy Required

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SPECIAL REPORT

LEEDuser expert

Ashwini Arun

WSP
Senior Sustainability Manager

SPECIAL REPORT

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Credit language

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© Copyright U.S. Green Building Council, Inc. All rights reserved.

Intent

To reduce the environmental harms associated with the materials purchased, installed, and disposed of during maintenance and renovation activities.

Requirements

Have in place a facility maintenance and renovation policy that includes guidelines for renovation and maintenance activities, using LEED rating system strategies, to be implemented at the discretion of building owners, operators, or tenants. Renovation activities include building improvements and tenant fit-outs. Maintenance activities include general repair and replacement.

The policy must cover at least those product purchases within the building and site management’s control. The policy must address purchasing, waste management and indoor air quality.

Purchasing Policy for Maintenance and Renovations
Have in place a purchasing policy for product and materials purchased for facility maintenance and renovation activities. Include at a minimum:

  • Base building elements permanently or semi- permanently attached to the building (mechanical, electrical and plumbing components and specialty items such as elevators are excluded). Exclude fixtures, and equipment, which are not considered base building elements;
  • Furniture and furnishings as well as components and parts needed to maintain them
    • Waste Management Policy for Maintenance and Renovations
      Have in place a waste management policy addressing the following:

      • Facility maintenance waste. The policy should address safe storage and recycling and diversion of waste associated with maintenance activities.
      • Renovation waste. The policy should describe the procedure for creating an individual plan for each renovation project. Each renovation project should establish waste diversion goals, target five materials for diversion, approximate the volume of waste anticipated, and identify waste diversion strategies to be used.
      • Furniture waste (Multifamily only). The policy should address storage locations for furniture and reuse or recycling of furniture waste.
      • Separation of facility maintenance and renovation waste from ongoing waste: The policy should indicate that facility maintenance and renovation waste are handled separately from ongoing waste.
        • The policy should address the criteria in the following credits:

          • MR Credit: Waste Performance

          Indoor Air Quality Policy for Maintenance and Renovations

          Have in place an indoor air quality policy for facility maintenance and renovation activities addressing the criteria below. For maintenance activities implement the policy as applicable. For renovation activities create an individual plan for each renovation project as outlined in the policy.

          • Follow the recommended control measures of the Sheet Metal and Air Conditioning National Contractors Association (SMACNA) IAQ Guidelines for Occupied Buildings under Construction, 2nd edition (2007), ANSI/SMACNA 008–2008, Chapter 3
            • Protect stored on-site and installed absorptive materials from moisture damage.
            • Do not operate permanently-installed air handling equipment during construction unless filtration media with a minimum efficiency reporting value (MERV) of 8, as determined by ASHRAE 52.2–2007, with errata (or equivalent filtration media class of F5 or higher, as defined by CEN Standard EN 779–2002, Particulate Air Filters for General Ventilation, Determination of the Filtration Performance), are installed at each return air grille and return or transfer duct inlet opening such that there is no bypass around the filtration media.
          • Develop a procedure to, before occupancy, replace all filtration media with the final design filtration media.
          • Develop a plan to determine whether a flush-out or air quality testing is needed after construction ends and all interior finishes are installed but before occupancy.
          East Asia ACP: Construction IAQ Equivalent

          Projects in East Asia may use filtration media classified as medium efficiency (中效过滤器) or higher as defined by Chinese standard GB/T 14295-2008(空气过滤器).

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Frequently asked questions

Does the policy need to cover routine facility maintenance activity?

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Do we have to attempt the purchasing credit (Option 2) since those materials are included in our FMR policy? What if we attempt them and we don’t earn them?

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Do we have to track maintenance and renovation waste for this prerequisite? Where do we track it?

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See all forum discussions about this credit »

Documentation toolkit

The motherlode of cheat sheets

LEEDuser’s Documentation Toolkit is loaded with calculators to help assess credit compliance, tracking spreadsheets for materials, sample templates to help guide your narratives and LEED Online submissions, and examples of actual submissions from certified LEED projects for you to check your work against. To get your plaque, start with the right toolkit.

LEEDuser expert

Ashwini Arun

WSP
Senior Sustainability Manager

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USGBC logo

© Copyright U.S. Green Building Council, Inc. All rights reserved.

Intent

To reduce the environmental harms associated with the materials purchased, installed, and disposed of during maintenance and renovation activities.

Requirements

Have in place a facility maintenance and renovation policy that includes guidelines for renovation and maintenance activities, using LEED rating system strategies, to be implemented at the discretion of building owners, operators, or tenants. Renovation activities include building improvements and tenant fit-outs. Maintenance activities include general repair and replacement.

The policy must cover at least those product purchases within the building and site management’s control. The policy must address purchasing, waste management and indoor air quality.

Purchasing Policy for Maintenance and Renovations
Have in place a purchasing policy for product and materials purchased for facility maintenance and renovation activities. Include at a minimum:

  • Base building elements permanently or semi- permanently attached to the building (mechanical, electrical and plumbing components and specialty items such as elevators are excluded). Exclude fixtures, and equipment, which are not considered base building elements;
  • Furniture and furnishings as well as components and parts needed to maintain them
    • Waste Management Policy for Maintenance and Renovations
      Have in place a waste management policy addressing the following:

      • Facility maintenance waste. The policy should address safe storage and recycling and diversion of waste associated with maintenance activities.
      • Renovation waste. The policy should describe the procedure for creating an individual plan for each renovation project. Each renovation project should establish waste diversion goals, target five materials for diversion, approximate the volume of waste anticipated, and identify waste diversion strategies to be used.
      • Furniture waste (Multifamily only). The policy should address storage locations for furniture and reuse or recycling of furniture waste.
      • Separation of facility maintenance and renovation waste from ongoing waste: The policy should indicate that facility maintenance and renovation waste are handled separately from ongoing waste.
        • The policy should address the criteria in the following credits:

          • MR Credit: Waste Performance

          Indoor Air Quality Policy for Maintenance and Renovations

          Have in place an indoor air quality policy for facility maintenance and renovation activities addressing the criteria below. For maintenance activities implement the policy as applicable. For renovation activities create an individual plan for each renovation project as outlined in the policy.

          • Follow the recommended control measures of the Sheet Metal and Air Conditioning National Contractors Association (SMACNA) IAQ Guidelines for Occupied Buildings under Construction, 2nd edition (2007), ANSI/SMACNA 008–2008, Chapter 3
            • Protect stored on-site and installed absorptive materials from moisture damage.
            • Do not operate permanently-installed air handling equipment during construction unless filtration media with a minimum efficiency reporting value (MERV) of 8, as determined by ASHRAE 52.2–2007, with errata (or equivalent filtration media class of F5 or higher, as defined by CEN Standard EN 779–2002, Particulate Air Filters for General Ventilation, Determination of the Filtration Performance), are installed at each return air grille and return or transfer duct inlet opening such that there is no bypass around the filtration media.
          • Develop a procedure to, before occupancy, replace all filtration media with the final design filtration media.
          • Develop a plan to determine whether a flush-out or air quality testing is needed after construction ends and all interior finishes are installed but before occupancy.
          East Asia ACP: Construction IAQ Equivalent

          Projects in East Asia may use filtration media classified as medium efficiency (中效过滤器) or higher as defined by Chinese standard GB/T 14295-2008(空气过滤器).

In the end, LEED is all about documentation. LEEDuser’s Documentation Toolkit, for premium members only, saves you time and helps you avoid mistakes with:

  • Calculators to help assess credit compliance.
  • Tracking spreadsheets for materials purchases.
  • Spreadsheets and forms to give to subs and other team members.
  • Guidance documents on arcane LEED issues.
  • Sample templates to help guide your narratives and LEED Online submissions.
  • Examples of actual submissions from certified LEED projects.

Does the policy need to cover routine facility maintenance activity?

The answer to this question is available to LEEDuser premium members. Start a free trial »

(If you're already a premium member, log in here.)

Do we have to attempt the purchasing credit (Option 2) since those materials are included in our FMR policy? What if we attempt them and we don’t earn them?

The answer to this question is available to LEEDuser premium members. Start a free trial »

(If you're already a premium member, log in here.)

Do we have to track maintenance and renovation waste for this prerequisite? Where do we track it?

The answer to this question is available to LEEDuser premium members. Start a free trial »

(If you're already a premium member, log in here.)

LEEDuser expert

Ashwini Arun

WSP
Senior Sustainability Manager

See all LEEDuser forum discussions about this credit » Subscribe to new discussions about Warehouses-EBOM-v4.1 MRp2