flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

Creating net-zero/net-positive buildings is top priority in Green Building Trends 2021 report

Codes and Standards

Creating net-zero/net-positive buildings is top priority in Green Building Trends 2021 report

Findings also demonstrate compelling business case for building green.


By Peter Fabris, Contributing Editor | November 19, 2021
Solar panels

Courtesy Pixabay

The U.S Green Building Council’s (USGBC’s) 2021 World Green Building Trends report shows that building industry firms are looking to make the construction of net-zero/net-positive buildings a top priority.

“This reflects the recognition that only by making the built environment carbon-neutral can the goal to minimize the impacts of climate change be achieved,” according to a USGBC news release. More than 1,200 industry professionals, including engineers, architects/designers, contractors, owners, developers, inventors, and consultants around the world responded to the survey.

The findings also demonstrate a compelling business case for building green. The average reduction in operating costs for the first 12 months in a new green building is 10.5%, and five-year cost savings are 16.9%, according to survey results.

Other findings include:

· The pandemic impacted the green building sector with many respondents saying that messaging about increasing filtered air exchange in buildings directly influenced their choice of HVAC system, and social distancing standards affected building design.

· More than half of those that work on a majority of green projects plan to incorporate resilience strategies into their projects in the next five years.

· Most respondents (82%) are at least aware of the concept of embodied carbon – emissions from manufacture, transportation, installation, maintenance, and disposal of building materials – with contractors and owners less familiar than architects and engineers. The majority (79%) of those building green use at least one metric to track green building performance, an increase of five points since 2018.

· About half of respondents engage in green renovation/retrofit projects, with most investors engaged in this work.

Related Stories

| Dec 13, 2012

So-called fiscal cliff is already affecting construction jobs, AGC finds

In November, the construction industry shed 20,000 jobs and its unemployment rate reached 12.2%, according to an analysis by the Associated General Contractors of America.

| Dec 13, 2012

New York City poised to enact recycling mandate for multi-family dwellings

New York City lags behind other large cities in recycling with only 15% of residential trash being recycled. A new bill passed by the City Council aims to improve the rate by changing how new apartment buildings are constructed.

| Dec 13, 2012

Pima County, Ariz. officials say improved code enforcement scores will help lower insurance bills

Insurance Service Office, Inc. (ISO) recently analyzed building codes and enforcement and found that Pima County, Ariz., consistently outscored comparable jurisdictions in Arizona and the nation.

| Dec 13, 2012

D.C. aims to be a green leader with new building codes

The District of Columbia has released a revised set of building codes to make it a leader in green construction.

| Dec 7, 2012

Georgia court limits contractors’ ability to foreclose on liens

The Georgia Court of Appeals ruled in 182 Tenth, LLC v. Manhattan Construction Company that lien claimants such as contractors, subcontractors, and materialmen, may not foreclose on a lien that includes unpaid general condition costs.

| Dec 7, 2012

San Francisco real estate records will include ‘green labels’

Ecologically-sustainable building practices, or “green labels,” will now be included on official land records maintained by San Francisco.

| Dec 7, 2012

Tokyo’s Green Building Program has reduced power consumption by 20%

Tokyo city officials calculate that its Green Building Program reduced energy consumption by 20% since its inception, a statistic they identify as the reason the power stayed on during the 2011 earthquake.

| Dec 7, 2012

New flexible options make achieving LEED certification easier on projects outside the US

A new set of Global Alternative Compliance Paths, or Global ACPs, are now available for all commercial projects pursuing LEED green building certification using the 2009 versions of the rating systems.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category




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