
Several rating systems have been developed to enable designers, builders, and building owners to acquire third-party certification for how "green" a given building project is. Over time the rating systems have made a significant impact on the building industry by identifying and quantifying the sustainability benefits of specific building practices, creating attractive voluntary goals with recognizable marketing cachet, allowing comparisons to be made between unique projects within rating categories, and reducing the possibility for "green-washing". Rating systems have also contributed to benchmarking and quantifying energy and water use and savings. Rating systems also specifically address greenhouse gas emission reductions. The rating systems include:
In the absence of national or state green building standards, the evolving rating systems filled an urgent need for a standardization of practices. Many California cities were interested in mandating sustainable building, but could not afford the huge expense of drafting their own Green Building Codes. Instead many communities passed ordinances requiring that the designs for new construction and significant remodeling had to meet LEED standards (for commercial) and GreenPoint Rated minimum point thresholds (for residential) in order to get building permits.
At the end of 2009, EPA's WaterSense finalized it's criteria for the WaterSense Single-Family New Home Specification. The specification is designed to work with other voluntary green building programs such as the National Green Building Standard, ENERGY STAR, and the U.S. Green Building Council's Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) program.
In early 2010, California came out with a Green Building Standards Code, which applies to somewhat different categories and metrics than either LEED or GreenPoint Rated (GPR). It is a Code rather than a rating system. It remains to be seen how this will affect the green building programs already in place in cities across California and how the rating organizations themselves will fare in the future in this state.
The Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design System (LEED), developed by the US Green Building Council (USGBC), has become very widely recognized nationwide and internationally with its four tiers.
GreenPoint Rated, developed by the non-profit, Build It Green, is another widely adopted third-party rating system devised specifically for California conditions.
The California Green Building Standards Code (Title 24, Part 11), dubbed CALGREEN for short, is being lauded as the first green building code to be enacted in any US state.
| Regional Water Board Meeting Wed Sep 08 @09:00AM Elihu M. Harris Building, First Floor Auditorium, 1515 Clay Street, Oakland, CA 94612 |
| Fundamentals of Grey Water Systems for Sustainable and Integrated Water Management - New Webinar Mon Sep 13 @11:30AM Webinar |
| Wholly H2o September Forum: Establishiing Baseline Water Use, Audits, Benchmarking Mon Sep 13 @07:00PM Jellyfish Gallery, 1286 Folsom (at Ninth St.) San Francisco, CA 94103 (corner of 9th and Folsom, Civic Center Bart) |
| Early Detection Monitoring for Quagga & Zebra Mussels Tue Sep 14 @08:00AM EBMUD San Pablo Bay Reservoir ,7301 San Pablo Dam Road, San Pablo, CA |
| Theoretical and practical approaches for event detection and alarm reduction in water treatment Wed Sep 15 @11:30AM Webinar |