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Inside LEED v4: The view from the MEP engineering seats

Inside LEED v4: The view from the MEP engineering seats

Much of the spirited discussion around LEED v4 has been centered on the Materials & Resources Credit. At least one voice in the wilderness is shouting for greater attention to another huge change in LEED.


By Robert Cassidy, Editorial Director | October 21, 2014
The 44,640-sf Iowa Utilities Board/Office of the Consumer Advocate Building in D
The 44,640-sf Iowa Utilities Board/Office of the Consumer Advocate Building in Des Moines, completed in 2011, earned AIA Committ

Much of the spirited discussion around LEED v4 has been centered on the Materials & Resources Credit, Building Products Disclosure and Optimization ā€“ Material Ingredientsā€”especially with regard to building products containing substances that could be toxic to humans or the environment.

At least one voice in the wilderness is shouting for greater attention to another huge change in LEED: the shift to ASHRAE 90.1-2010 as the new reference standard for Energy & Atmosphere prerequisites and credits. ā€œThatā€™s the real story in LEED v4, from an MEP point of view,ā€ says Scott Bowman, PE, LEED Fellow. ā€œThe change to 90.1-2010 makes v4 much more rigorous.ā€

Bowman, who recently retired as Corporate Sustainability Leader at KJWW Engineering Consultants (where he was involved in 119 LEED-certified projects), says Building Teams need to start warning their clients that itā€™s going to be a lot tougher to reach LEED Gold or Platinum under v4. He says that some of the 14 LEED Platinum projects that he worked on at KJWW might barely squeak by with a Silver or Gold rating under v4. Ā Projects that were Silver or Gold might not even reach certified.

ā€œWe need to be working on our clientsā€™ expectations now, because the changes that are coming are going to be significant,ā€ says Bowman, who recently established his own consultancy, Integrated Design + Energy Advisors, known as IDEA. ā€œOur clients should know that we may have to do a couple more runs on the energy modeling for the designā€ā€”and that could mean additional fees.

Raising the bar for commissioning in LEED v4

Engineering consultant Scott Bowman says commissioning is a whole new game in LEED v4. The fundamental commissioning and verification prerequisite has added design review as a requirement, but heā€™s not sanguine about the methodology. ā€œIt could mean that an engineer on the project could be reviewing the work of another engineer from the same firm,ā€ says Bowman. ā€œFor the review to be of value, there should be an independent third party.ā€

The Cx prerequisite also requires the Building Team to prepare an operations and maintenance plan, somewhat like a systems manual but less extensive. Bowman warns that preparing this document likely will add to the costs of v4 certification. ā€œClients should understand that your old rule of thumb on commissioning costs may be out of date.ā€

Bowman says heā€™s encouraged by the requirement (in the v4 Cx prerequisite) for exterior enclosures to be included in the ownerā€™s project requirements (OPR) and basis of design. ā€œOPR is the most underutilized management tool in our industry,ā€ he says. ā€œWe need to do better OPRs.ā€

But heā€™s not crazy about a requirement that a design team member who is not directly involved in the design of the exterior enclosure complete a review of the enclosure design. ā€œIt could be just a different person from the same design firm checking the work,ā€ he says. ā€œThatā€™s very squishy.ā€

Two points are also available under Enhanced Commissioning for envelope commissioning, but Bowman says he is disappointed that some of the MEP services that were required in the Enhanced Cx credit have been put into the Cx prerequisite.

The intentā€”to give Building Teams a toehold on envelope commissioningā€”is an honorable one, says Bowman. ā€œI look forward to a future when envelope commissioning is a fundamental, but I donā€™t think LEED has defined it well enough yet,ā€ he says.

ā€œWe had a major jump from 90.1-2004 to 90.1-2010,ā€ says Bowman, a second-generation engineer. He points to data from the Energy Departmentā€™s Pacific Northwest National Lab: energy use intensity (EUI) was reduced 4.5% moving from ASHRAE 90.1-2004 to 90.1-2007, but 90.1-2010 brings it down a much more demanding 18.5%.

LEED v4 buildings will have to be 30% better on EUI improvement just to meet the prerequisite, he says, ā€œand they have to go even higher to get EA points.ā€

Key technical improvements in v4 EA credits, according to Bowman:
ā€¢ Ā Minimum energy performance has to be 5% above ASHRAE 90.1-2010, 3% for renovation projects; minimum Energy Star rating must be 75 or better.
ā€¢ Building-level energy metering is now required for all buildings.
ā€¢ Demand response is now a credit. Projects can earn up to two points for installing systems necessary to participate in a demand response program. Projects located in areas with no demand response program can earn a point by making the building ready to engage in such a program. ā€œThe idea of preparing buildings for demand response is a good one,ā€ says Bowman.

Strategies that once were nice-to-haves are now required. ā€œIf you have clerestories and skylights, you have to have daylighting controls,ā€ says Bowman. ā€œBefore v4, it was a strategy, now itā€™s a requisite.ā€ Lighting power density is also much more stringent, he says.

Building Teams are going to have to reach higher in their building envelope designs, says Bowman. ā€œYou canā€™t rely on the mechanical/electrical system alone to help you comply with v4,ā€ he warns. ā€œYou only get one chance with the envelope. Some of our 100-year-old buildings still have single-pane glass! We need to encourage clients to invest more in good windows, walls, and roofs.ā€

A similar philosophy guides the use of renewables in LEED v4: the project must meet the requisite energy performance levels before renewables can be applied. ā€œThe idea in high performance is: first, use less energy; then, use it efficiently; and then, and only then, make it on site, via renewables,ā€ says Bowman. ā€œYou canā€™t use PVs to make up for a bad building.ā€

Measurement and verification credits have been heavily modified under v4, in Bowmanā€™s view. ā€œUnder LEED 2009, M&V attempted to guide projects to measure energy use on a much more granular basis than before, but it was not implemented very much, and it really was more of an operational credit,ā€ something that should be in LEED EBOM, he says. LEED v4 sets a prerequisite for building-level energy metering. ā€œThatā€™s not going to be a problem for 99% of LEED v4 projects,ā€ says Bowman. The only possible exception: campus projects.

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LEED v4 buildings will have to be 30% better on EUI improvement just to meet the new prerequisite. ILLUSTRATION: COURTESY PNNL

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Bowman also likes Credit EAc3, Advanced Energy Metering, one of the credits that replaced M&V and can earn a point for metering all energy end uses representing 10% or more of total energy use in the building. Meters must be connected to the building automation system; data must be logged at appropriate intervals and stored for 36 months. ā€œThis is a good step, to encourage energy metering,ā€ he says. ā€œThe cost of these devices has been coming down dramatically, and this will become standard among higher-level clients.ā€

Bowman reminds Building Teams to keep their clients posted on the energy components of LEED v4. ā€œThe energy side is where the v4 story is,ā€ he says. ā€œIf I had a criticism of LEED, it is that we didnā€™t have as much of a jump in energy requirements between LEED 2.2 and LEED 2009. We really didnā€™t push the technology that far.ā€

LEED v4 does.

Scott Bowman (bowmansc.scb@gmail.com) was scheduled to present his views on LEED v4 at BuildingCHICAGO/Greening the Heartland. He will be inducted as a LEED Fellow at Greenbuild on October 23.Ā 

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