What makes it green?

by
What color is green?
The fundamental, unanswered — perhaps unanswerable — question. And it's not just people new to the concept of "green" who are asking it as technology, information, and philosophy continue to evolve. "Green" seekers are all spread out on an incredibly wide path, and all are at different points along the way.
Read more »

Were We Too Critical of EnergySmart Hospitals?

by
In an online article on the U.S. Department of Energy's EnergySmart Hospitals, we compared that program to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's Energy Star for Healthcare program. Having looked at both programs, we suggested that, without benchmarking and reporting requirements, the EnergySmart Hospitals program was the less rigorous of the two. In addition, several sources we spoke with suggested that the program would do little to support energy efficiency that the Energy Star program was not already doing.
Read more »

Stupid Green Buildings

by
We've all had this conversation: is a huge single family green home really green? A new building in the desert? A man-made island in Dubai? The blog Green Building Elements has collected the 10 Dumbest Green Buildings on Earth, including a BP gas station, a golf lodge, a single-family skyscraper, and a car dealership. A green building is better than a non-green building, in just about any situation. But many of these buildings raise the question: is greener always better? Or even green?
Read more »

The Answer is Blowing in the Wind

by
NOT FOR EVERY SITE. Wind power doesn't make sense everywhere. Fortunately this site is consistently breezy enough to generate the 6,000 kWh of electricity that David Pill's family demands each year. Here, a gin pole -- an old-fashioned but effective winch-and-mast system -- is used to hoist the wind turbine into position.

Over the past few weeks, we've looked at a few power-generation technologies: pumped hydro, landfill gas, and nuclear. This week, we'll examine another option that's been in the news a lot over the past few years: wind power.

Read more »

Remembering Gail Lindsey

by
At the 2008 "Summer Camp" in the Adirondacks.Photo: Mike Cox
The green building industry lost one of its pillars this week. Less than two years after being diagnosed with breast cancer in April 2007, Gail Lindsey, FAIA, of Wake Forest, North Carolina, passed away on February 2nd. She had been recovering from a third round of chemotherapy when a sudden recurrence of liver cancer was discovered late last week. Gail has been a key part of the green building movement since its earliest formative days.
Read more »