NBN Online for the week of January 29, 2007

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In This Issue:

Front Page
New EPA-Certified Toilets Address Water Shortages
IBS NextGen Home to Demonstrate Storm-Resistant Technologies
Going to Orlando? Read the Special IBS Preview Issue of NBN
Nation's Building News Will Not Be Published Feb. 5 or Feb. 12
Coast to Coast
Pulte Pulls Plug on Prefab Virginia Plant
Politics & Government
NAHB Visiting All 535 U.S. House and Senate Offices
Economics & Finance
December Rise in Home Sales Bodes Well for 2007 Upturn
Waterfront Sites Add Most Value in NAHB House Price Estimator
Eye on the Economy: Housing Production Should Bottom Out Soon
IBS
NAHB’s Council Headquarters Suites, Your Path to Success
BuilderBooks.com Has New Resources Available at IBS
Executive Officers Council Events at the Builders’ Show
Tips
Builders' Tip: A Simple Way to Close Off Windows
Business Management
Try Technology Before You Buy, at IBS Computer Labs
Sign Up to Present at the Custom Builders Symposium
50Plus Housing
50+ Housing Council Events at the Builders’ Show
Remodelers
Remodeling Growth Expected to Moderate in 2007
Building Systems
Log Homes Council Sells Cookbooks to Fight Cancer
Commercial
Community Centers: Growing Demand, Growing Opportunity
Sales
NSMC/IRM Events at the International Builders' Show
Use CRS Credits Toward New Homes Sales Designations
Education
Fuel Up On Education at IBS, Win Free Gas for a Year
IBS Pre-Show Education About Marketing, More
Education Calendar
Green Building
Voluntary Green Programs Counter Costly LEED Approach
Workforce housing
Congressional Interest Grows in Helping Homeless Veterans
Count Sets Baseline to Monitor Homelessness Trend
International
International Awards Open to U.S. Industry Professionals
Labor
Landscaping Students Graduate From Project CRAFT
Building Products
Steel-Framed Home to Benefit Gulf Coast Children’s Hospital
Danze Pot Fillers Lead Hot New Trend in Kitchen Faucets
TV
Audition at IBS to Host NAHB-Produced TV Home Show
HGTV Looks for Builder for 2009 Dream Home Giveaway
NAHB-Produced Programs on HGTV and DIY This Week
Endowment
Centex 'Build Your Future' Scholarships Available
Association News
Noted Wisconsin Builder Arthur Davis, Jr. Dies at 86
Bob Jones a Candidate for NAHB Vice President/Secretary
NAHB Board Meetings Scheduled for Builders’ Show
Free UPS Shipping From the BuilderBooks Store in Orlando
GM $500 Off for NAHB Members Rolls Into 2007
Builders Rock! Limited Edition Pin Available at Builders’ Show
Calendar of Events
NAHB Career Center

Voluntary Green Programs Counter Costly LEED Approach

The Home Builders Association of Greater Springfield, Mo., is the latest local association to take steps to launch a new green building program based on NAHB’s Model Green Home Building Guidelines.

Matt Belcher of Belcher Homes, a green builder based in Wildwood, Mo. and president of the Home Builders Association of St. Louis and Eastern Missouri, visited Springfield last week to discuss the success of his HBA’s own green building program, which is now two years old. The St. Louis green building program has certified 20 homes in the area, and 100 more are under construction — including a 28-home infill development within the city limits.

Since 2005, the Green Building Initiative has helped state and local HBAs launch 15 green building certification programs, with 10 more currently being developed. Additional programs — like Springfield’s — have been launched independently but are based on the Model Green Home Building Guidelines.

At the very least, even when they are not based on the NAHB guidelines, such green programs as the one being created by the HBA of Montana are voluntary, and that is providing an important alternative to green building mandates, said Ray Tonjes, a custom builder in Austin, Texas and chair of the NAHB Green Building Subcommittee.

“The U.S. Green Building Council's LEED-H certification program for single-family homes is still in pilot, but there seems to be some thoughts out there that it’s already a standard — and should be mandated,” Tonjes said. “The problem is that it’s too expensive and it’s not particularly intuitive. We cannot allow niche products like LEED-H to become the norm for green building programs. It would have a drastic effect on the price of housing, and I think that’s simply irresponsible.”

Instead, Tonjes said, green building approaches need to recognize the regional differences around the U.S. “Water conservation in Albuquerque means something different than water conservation in Albany. Solar panels don’t work in Washington State like they do in Waco. Only flexible, locally grown green building programs can adequately take local issues, architecture, weather and geographic differences into account.”

NAHB is working to take the guidelines through the American National Standards Institute’s development process. The goal is to offer local jurisdictions an “off-the-shelf” green building program that is consensus-based and truly green, but that remains flexible, he said. The process usually takes two years or more to complete, but the Green Building Subcommittee expects the standard to be fast-tracked because the guidelines were also developed using a consensus process.

Once the standard is established, local jurisdictions will be more inclined to look at the success of guidelines-based programs. “Green building is too dynamic to be put into a box or pinned to a wall. With a voluntary, market-driven program, it’s much easier to demonstrate that green building can be better building,” Tonjes said.

For more information, e-mail Calli Schmidt at NAHB, or call her at 800-368-5242 x8132.


 

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