flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

New tools help LEED projects reach health goals

Codes and Standards

New tools help LEED projects reach health goals

Pilot credit supports high-performance projects that are cost-effective and promote human health.


By Peter Fabris, Contributing Editor | August 2, 2022
LEED projects
Courtesy Pixabay.

The U.S. Green Building Council now offers tools to support the LEED Integrative Process for Health Promotion (IPHP) pilot credit.

This credit can be used to guide high-performance projects that are also cost-effective and promote human health. Early planning and action can help project teams select and tailor LEED credits based on a project’s specific health context.

IPHP encourages teams to consider the impact that project design and construction has on health and well-being (including physical, mental, and social effects) of occupants. A newly released suite of materials supports projects in achieving health-related goals through this pilot credit.

The tools and resources were developed by the Green Health Partnership, an applied research initiative between the University of Virginia School of Medicine and USGBC, funded by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The tools available for all types of projects are:

  • Green Buildings for Health: An Owner’s Roadmap to the LEED Health Process
  • LEED Health Process: Workshops Guide for Project Owners
  • LEED Health Process: Monitoring Outcomes in Buildings
  • Green Buildings for Health: A Project Team’s Roadmap to the LEED Health Process
  • LEED Health Process: Workshops Guide for Project Teams
  • Worksheet: Setting Project Health Goals
  • Worksheet: Health Design Charrette


Other tools are tailored for teams working on school projects.

 

Related Stories

| Jul 5, 2012

Continued tax breaks necessary for widespread adoption of net zero buildings

Tax breaks passed by the U.S. government to encourage construction of green buildings are set to expire in 2012 and 2013.

| Jun 28, 2012

Six buildings now recognized under Living Building Challenge

The Living Building Challenge (LBC), a green ratings system for design and construction that judges a building based on its actual performance, not just its projected performance at the design stage, has recognized six buildings to date.

| Jun 28, 2012

Label for building products will have ‘global warming number’

The director of the 2030 Challenge for Products says that the organization is aiming to place a label on building products that will list what’s in it, and how much embodied carbon each product represents.

| Jun 28, 2012

Top building material executive urges building resilience in sustainability standards

A meeting of 1,000 business executives at the recent Rio+20 environmental conference featured a passionate plea to include building resilience in efforts to boost sustainability.

| Jun 28, 2012

Following spate of skyscraper balcony glass panel breakages, Ontario adopts code change

Ontario's housing minister announced new building code rules to help prevent glass panels from breaking off high-rise balconies during hot weather.

| Jun 28, 2012

Factory worker deaths in Italy raise questions on building codes after earthquakes

Italian officials are questioning seismic building standards and inspection procedures in the aftermath of two damaging earthquakes.

| Jun 21, 2012

Brazilian engineering/construction firm Odebrecht sues Florida over ban on companies doing business in Cuba

Odebrecht Construction Inc., a Brazilian engineering and construction company, is suing the State of Florida over a new law that bans governments from hiring companies with business ties to Cuba.

| Jun 21, 2012

String of shattered glass balcony panels prompts call for code reform in Ontario

Since last summer, glass balconies have shattered at 13 different buildings in Toronto.

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