flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

2012 LEED for Homes Award recipients announced

2012 LEED for Homes Award recipients announced

USGBC recognizes excellence in the green residential building community at its Greenbuild Conference & Expo in San Francisco


By Posted by Tim Gregorski, Senior Editor | November 13, 2012

The U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC) has named the recipients of the 2012 LEED for Homes Awards, recognizing projects, developers and homebuilders that have demonstrated leadership in the residential green building marketplace. The awards will be presented during the Residential Summit reception on Thursday, Nov. 15, 2012, at the Greenbuild International Conference & Expo held in San Francisco. The award categories recognize innovative multi- and single-family projects, production builders, affordable housing projects and developers, an overall commitment to LEED for Homes and Project of the Year.

“This year’s leadership recipients represent a dynamic field showcasing the range of residential developments that certify under USGBC’s LEED for Homes program each year,” said Nate Kredich, vice president, Residential Market Development, USGBC. “The fact that our project of the year is an affordable housing development that achieved LEED Platinum certification is a shining example of how diversified the LEED for Homes portfolio has become.”

Winners for this year include:

  • Project of the Year – The Puyallup Longhouse’s the Place of Hidden Waters: This LEED Platinum certified housing project is a culturally and environmentally responsive new model for the Puyallup Tribe in the Pacific NW. It’s located on the Puyallup reservation on a hill overlooking the Puget Sound tide flats, which were traditional Puyallup tribal lands. The buildings are designed to emulate the rectangular, shed roofed form of a traditional Coast Salish longhouse using a variation of the modern townhouse courtyard building. Structural insulated panels with excellent air sealing for a well-insulated envelope, triple pane windows and ground source heat pumps for both domestic hot water and hydronic heating systems are some of the sustainable features.
  • Outstanding Production Builder – Clarum Communities for Cambridge Plaza: Located in Palo Alto, Calif., Cambridge Plaza is a three-story townhome project constructed by Clarum Homes that achieved a LEED Platinum rating thanks to sustainable building materials and a commitment to energy and water efficiency. Its “smart” design features include a photovoltaic system and a thermal solar hot water system using a 80 gallon pre-heat storage tank and a G.E. GeoSpring electric heat pump back up waterheater.
  • Outstanding Affordable Developer - Avesta Housing for Oak Street Lofts: This project is the first affordable multifamily building to achieve LEED Platinum in Maine. The building is a four-story, 37-unit building located in the heart of Portland's Art District. The project stands out as it incorporates many design innovations, which illustrate that even affordable housing projects, with limited capital budgets, can achievehigh rates of energy efficiency and enhanced comfort for occupants. The building achieved a preliminary energy savings of 35 percent better than ASHRAE with a 40.94 percent energy cost savings.
  • Outstanding Affordable Project – Rio Vista Apartments, Abode Communities: This is the first development in LA County to co-locate affordable housing with an educational component owned and operated by the Los Angeles Unified School District on the District’s surplus land. The LEED Platinum apartments transform a vacant parking lot into a model joint-use development addressing the needs of 50 low-income families. The site is a high-density infill, a former brownfield with existing infrastructure, and is located with access to outstanding community resources. Rio Vista is energy efficient (exceeds Title 24 by 40 percent) and includes an edible garden atop the roof with a central trellised courtyard providing a shaded outdoor space to reduce heat island effects.
  • Outstanding Commitment to LEED for Homes – McGuyer Homebuilders, Inc. (MHI): The Texas-based company is the only national-scale production homebuilder that has successfully implemented LEED for Homes across multiple communities and across multiple product offerings. MHI is a practical, profit-oriented builder who pursues LEED as a strategy to meet client needs. MHI strives to find ways to successfully compete with the publically traded homebuilding companies by offering something new and different.
  • Outstanding Multifamily Project – Specialized Real Estate Group for Eco Modern Flats: This LEED Platinum project is a gut rehab of a 96-unit market rate apartment complex built between 1968 and1972 and located in Fayetteville, Ark. The developers’ goals were to deliver a product that was not currently available in the market—modern, urban, green multifamily rental—and to save operations costs through energy and water-saving updates. In addition to the rehab itself, a blog and other informational resources were developed, and hundreds of people toured a model unit highlighting 32 sustainable strategies employed in the project.
  • Outstanding Single Family Project – Brooks Residence (architect Isabelle Duvivier): Located in Venice, Calif., the Brooks Residence is a 1,700 sq. ft. LEED Platinum home. Homeowner and architect, Isabelle Duvivier, purchased the 100-year-old home in a well-established, low-income neighborhood in order to restore it. The goal was to reduce the footprint/impact of the house on the planet through water, energy and material efficiency. Above and beyond that goal, the home designworks to restore habitats for birds, bees and butterflies and creates educational opportunities for the local community. +

Related Stories

| Jan 30, 2012

Hollister Construction Services to renovate 30 Montgomery Street in Jersey City, N.J.

Owner Onyx Equities hires firm to oversee comprehensive upgrades of office building.

| Jan 27, 2012

Caterpillar reports record sales and profit for 4Q and full-year 2011

Momentum carries into 2012 with sales and revenues outlook raised to $68 to $72 billion.

| Jan 27, 2012

Smith Seckman Reid opens two new offices

Smith Seckman Reid, Inc. (SSR), an engineering design and facility consulting firm, has opened two new offices, one in Chicago, the other in Washington, D.C.

| Jan 27, 2012

BRB Architects designs new campus center for Molloy College

Intended to be the centerpiece of the College’s transformation from a commuter college to a 24-hour learning community, the “Public Square” will support student life with spaces such as a café, lounges, study rooms, student club space, a bookstore and an art gallery.

| Jan 27, 2012

Columbia University’s New Core Laboratory aims for LEED Silver

Construction manager Sordoni Construction Co. along with the design team of Payette Architects and Vanderweil Engineers will provide design and construction services to renovate the majority of the existing Core Lab building to create the new Lamont Center for Bio-Geochemistry.

| Jan 26, 2012

Three dead, 16 missing in Rio buildings collapse

The buildings, one 20 floors high, collapsed on Wednesday night in a cloud of dust and smoke just one block away from the city's historic Municipal Theater.

| Jan 26, 2012

Siemens launches smoke detection knowledge center

New knowledge center web site demonstrates efficacy of smoke detection. 

| Jan 26, 2012

Hendrick Construction completes Osso Restaurant in Charlotte

Designed by François Fossard, Osso's upscale interior includes tapered, twisted decorative columns and an elegant fireplace in the center of the lounge. 

| Jan 26, 2012

HOK partners with USGBC on design of Haiti children's center

Passive design principles give form to a sustainable, restorative environment for the children of Haiti.

| Jan 26, 2012

American Standard names Gould as president and CEO

Gould succeeds Don Devine, who led the successful turnaround of American Standard Brands.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category



Urban Planning

The magic of L.A.’s Melrose Mile

Great streets are generally not initially curated or willed into being. Rather, they emerge organically from unintentional synergies of commercial, business, cultural and economic drivers. L.A.’s Melrose Avenue is a prime example. 


Curtain Wall

7 steps to investigating curtain wall leaks

It is common for significant curtain wall leakage to involve multiple variables. Therefore, a comprehensive multi-faceted investigation is required to determine the origin of leakage, according to building enclosure consultants Richard Aeck and John A. Rudisill with Rimkus. 

halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021