Showing posts with label Living LEED. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Living LEED. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 16, 2013

Living LEED Edition No.2: Water, Water everywhere or is it?!

This is a guide for LEED accredited professionals and eco-conscious individuals on how to apply the LEED credit scorecard to their personal lives.

This edition is a topic of much discussion: Water Reduction. We are all criminals in our over usage of water. Me, I am just as guilty. It's a cold early Spring day as I write this. I really enjoy a long hot shower. Who doesn't?! But how do you check and balance this is the heart of this discussion.

LEED across the various disciplines dictates our projects reduce its water usage by at least 20%. When you score higher percentages, for instance 30, 35 or 40, you get more credit points. We know how to achieve this: by metering, timed water usage, low to no flow toilets and more. As you know these formulas are based on men and women using toilet rooms "X" times a day. Come on LEED, let's get real! Not use the mean average! If you drink multiple cups of coffee a day, are you really holding it in and going about 3 times a day. I highly doubt it! In my interpretation, the credit is a minimum of what we should be doing on the job.

At home there is little chance of us ripping out our old faucets and installing new proximity sensor faucets. Usually we install a low flow toilet. Yet how many people have really installed aerators on their sink and shower faucets. I dare say many people love a pulsating water massage! Which is a water hog. No pun intended! So how do we get water usage reduced at home when we can or cannot replace fixtures? The answer is a major culture shift in our habits. One we have to practice no just at home but at work.

Get your water bills for the past year and create log of how much you use. Notice any variations. These could be time of year, a vacation or maybe you forgo showers at home for the ones at the gym! My lifestyle is already blissfully spartan even with 2 dogs. And these boys drink a lot of water. Yet my bill never goes above the minimum. I know by reviewing my bills and watching my water habits, I've drastically reduced my water consumption. By how much? I wish I could know. But when the city only charges you baseline, then you have nothing it to compare to.  

The keys to home Water Reduction and Consumption are simple: Reduce and Re-use. If there are children in the house it will be a challenge but one the kids will probably have fun doing. For us adults, it's changing our mindset. I've composed a list of things to help shift our Water Hog mentality. Many most of you will know. This list won't be pretty but neither is waste or wasting water. Clean water might not be an issue here in New England but I am waiting for the dam to break in Drought cultures in Texas and California. For your friends out there, this blog will help! So tighten those valves and let's get to reducing!
  • Reduce your hand washing time. PERIOD!
  • Wash your hands in a sink of water and not let the water run. Or put all your cups and bowls that need rinsing and wash your hands over them and let the grey water soak the dirty dishes.
  • Transfer that water or rinsing water to a potted indoor or outdoor plant. This is especially effective come summer. I rarely fill a bucket with water to water my patio garden of a dozen or so plants.
  • Fill up a bucket by keeping one with you in the shower. So that it catches the 'waste' water.
  • Install aereators!
  • Install a Flow Control valve on your shower head. While living in Europe, you learn to get wet, shut off the water, soap up, turn it back on to rinse the soap off. This would often lead to a cold shock but with a flow control, you will have the water temperature where you last had it.
  • Rinse all fruit and vegetables into a bucket and use the water for plants or, ahem, flushing No.1!
  • Icky dog or cat water, the plants love it!
  • Buy water saving/energy star dishwashers, horizontal axis washing machines. Only wash full loads!
  • Install rain barrels!
  • Plant indigenous and drought tolerant plants.

We've all got to Conserve! I need to take shorter hot showers. You and your family have to ween yourself of letting the water run forgetting that is is wasted down the drain. By conserving, we are helping to preserve our water resources and save money. 

We've all got to Reduce usage!

We all have to Re-use too!

LEED for buildings doesn't take into account the cultural factors. Living LEED does. I bet you can reduce far more than you think. The added benefit is more money in your wallet. So grab that glass and have a tall glass of filtered water, bottled is not the answer. Your tap is!

Steve is a Holistic Design Professional at a large Boston-area design firm. The opinions expressed by member bloggers are their own and not necessarily those of the USGBC Massachusetts Chapter. We welcome contributions from all Members. If you would like to write for the blog, use the Contact us tab to drop us a line.


Thursday, February 21, 2013

Living LEED® Edition No. 1: LEED isn’t just for buildings anymore. It’s for you and me!

This is a guide for LEED® accredited professionals and eco-conscious individuals on how to apply the LEED® credit scorecard to their personal lives.

Why should only buildings benefit from the LEED® requirements? If we as eco-conscious professionals follow the LEED® guidelines so that our projects can hit silver, gold or even platinum, then why not apply those guidelines to our everyday lives? By applying the scorecard to our daily life, we demonstrate that LEED® is not just limited to buildings but it is for everyone. It shows that we not only talk the talk but walk the walk.

My posts will be part personal journey, part advice column, part standard by which we all live by. Living LEED® is for everyone, not just about me writing my personal reflections or giving advice, it is about you and your journey to your own personal silver, gold, platinum or higher! With this column, I declare a new standard, the EVERGREEN standard. Let’s be like the Evergreen Trees who in their long fruitful lives give us more than they take. So let us give back to the environment more than what we take from it.

For reference: the posts will follow LEED® for EB and NC but to get to EVERGREEN level we will incorporate the other LEED® disciplines as Homes and CI whose credits cross pollinate. The choice of including LEED® for Homes is practical because it is where we spend much of our lives; in and around the home.

I call out to all my LEED® professionals and eco-conscious colleagues to contribute to credits that you have personally achieved and I will incorporate them here. I will try to write in each edition credits in the order they appear. This new Evergreen level doesn’t come with a prescribed checklist. It uses the LEED® checklist as a reference to achieve a level greater than before.


Our first attempt at EVERGREEN standard is to achieve credits in the section Sustainable Sites.

In the current version of EB and CI you get a point for having a LEED® certified building. If you are living in a LEED® Certified building or Home, you are ahead of the curve. My townhome is not LEED® certified.

The best that I can do is go for Energy Star. Everyone needs to go here and learn as much as they can. If you can, register your existing or new home and get it up to Energy Star standards.

Not ready for Energy Star? Then consider Mass Save®. Here you can begin the journey to energy savings and dollar savings! Mass Save is chock full of rebate programs that will send you in an Evergreen direction!


There are many more components to Sustainable Sites. In the next few posts, I will try to incorporate the credits that directly affect us as people, or can be used in conjunction with people. Without infringing on USGBC or Energy Star copyrights, we will reflect on the credits and checklists that inspire an Evergreen Level of standard we can all live by.  

Steve is a Holistic Design Professional at a large Boston-area design firm. 

We welcome contributions from all Members. If you would like to write for the blog, use the Contact us tab to drop us a line.