Popular Posts

Green Realtors, Sustainable Buildings, Green Architecture



21st Century Architecture

INHABITAT

Green Mutual Fund Investing Info

A Daily Dose of Architecture

Find Green Homes for Sale, Green Builders

Wind Power Stocks to Watch

Thursday, February 7, 2008

John Colvin donates $3 mil to U of Maryland Green Real Estate program

article from: BizJournals.com

Developer gives $3M to launch 'green' real estate program

Washington Business Journal - by Ryan Sharrow Contributing Writer

A Baltimore developer has donated $3 million to become the namesake of a new "green" real estate program at the University of Maryland's flagship College Park campus.

The donation from John Colvin and his wife, Karen, will be used to create the Colvin Institute of Real Estate Development in Maryland's School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation. The donation will be used to create a new track in the program focusing on green design, sustainable development and energy financing.

Colvin, a University of Maryland graduate, is a principal at Baltimore-based real estate development Questar.

The new institute will be the academic home for the university's master's degree in real estate development track.

"The rules of the game are changing very quickly, and both the industry and higher education need to adapt," Colvin said in a news release.

The gift from Colvin is the largest in the history of Maryland's School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation.

The school's real estate development program has quickly expanded since launching in 2006. More than 75 students are currently enrolled in the program, up from a class of 12 in the fall of 2006, according to the school.

The university is in the midst of its latest capital campaign, dubbed "Great Expectations, the Campaign for Maryland." The school had raised $466 million as of January, nearly half of the $1 billion goal it hopes to hit by 2011.

Colvin is a senior fellow in the University of Maryland Executive Programs at the School of Public Policy.


More suggested browsing:



Best Alternative Energy Investing Websites



Windpower Stocks Investments



Investing in Geothermal Energy


Saturday, February 2, 2008

Listed Green has beautiful eco homes, naturally organic properties




Listed Green® Homes - the Green MLS
(Multiple Listing Service) exclusively for Green, Energy Efficient, Sustainable Homes and Housing Developments For Sale Worldwide.

The way we currently build and maintain our homes is one of the contributing factors to global warming.

Listed Green Homes is committed to being part of the solution to reduce global warming by promoting sustainable, energy efficient, healthy building design - in addition to helping elevate the market value of green homes and eco-friendly residential developments.

"Spread the word - watch us grow"

Architectural RFP for Green building project; Writing a Sustainable Design Proposal

Writing the Green Architecture RFP
Sustainable Design Language for Consultant Requests

OVERVIEW

This is a tool for clients--educational and cultural institutions, companies, agencies, non-profit organizations, and others--who are writing requests for proposals or qualifications from architects and other design professionals, as well as development, construction, and construction management services. Each project and site is different and each RFP or RFQ should also be unique, including the aspects of sustainable design and planning that are appropriate to the project, site, and region. This document touches on the basic elements of an RFP for design services for a sustainable project, as well as some of the issues to be considered. Some of the language cited is fairly ambitious, and clients should take care to thoroughly understand the cost and schedule implications of such requirements, should they include those in their project requests.

WHAT KIND OF REQUEST DO YOU NEED?

There are two primary types of requests for building design (and development, construction, and construction management) services, though there are variations on these and other types as well. Requests for Qualifications (RFQs) are the more basic requests, asking in large part for much of the information that would typically appear on the federal government?s Standard Forms 254 and 255, with some additional information. Requests for Proposals (RFPs) also ask for information about firm approach, process, experience, as well as requests for project specific information such as team organization, schedule approach, and fee schedules.

Less important than what the request is called is that it elicit responses complete enough for the client, the issuing organization, to make distinctions between competing firms and determine that one or another team is the right fit for the project.

A strong, well-written RFP will engage the interests of the teams who receive it and inspire creative responses to the problems presented. It will also accurately convey the full scope of the work desired, permitting the consultant teams respond realistically and specifically to the rest. The language should allow consultants to assess their firm?s ability to compete effectively for the work (preventing them the expense of a useless proposal and the client its time to review one).

SUSTAINABLE DESIGN BASICS

"[A]n exciting new field is emerging. It is called 'sustainable design' or 'green development.' Although this new architecture is difficult to describe in a sentence or two, its overall goal is to produce buildings that take less from the earth and give more to people. Note that sustainable design is not a new building style. Instead, it represents a revolution in how we think about, design, construct, and operate buildings. The primary goal of sustainable design is to lessen the harm poorly designed buildings cause by using the best of ancient building approaches in logical combination with the best of new technological advances. Its ultimate goal is to make possible offices, homes, even entire subdivisions, that are net producers of energy, food, clean water and air, beauty, and healthy human and biological communities. ... As an architect, builder, or developer, you can use the principles of sustainable design to capitalize on this trend, to distinguish your projects in the marketplace, to save money, and to waste fewer resources, all the while doing your share to preserve the environment. Applying that idea to construction yields a checklist of criteria that a sustainable building should meet. Ideally, such a building would:

  • make appropriate use of the land
  • use water, energy, lumber, and other resources efficiently
  • enhance human health
  • strengthen local economies and communities
  • conserve plants, animals, endangered species, and natural habitats
  • protect agricultural, cultural, and archaeological resources
  • be nice to live in
  • be economical to build and operate."

quoted from A Primer on Sustainable Building, Rocky Mountain Institute

CORE ELEMENTS OF REQUESTS

Project Introduction

The request should include a short introduction, which will state clearly and succinctly the scope of the project, the organization's vision for the project including sustainable design benchmarks desired, and the nature of services needed. If the client is a partnership, the nature of that relationship should be stated.

It is also appropriate for the request to state the client's core mission, identify how sustainable design relates to that mission, and reference other relevant statements about the motive for pursuing a sustainable design project. The client should do internal goal setting prior to the writing of the request, and those goals can provide the framework for the project introduction.

Sample language:

...the Museum has defined its mission as "to inspire wonder, discovery and responsibility for our natural and cultural worlds." Our vision statement describes an active, outward looking institution: To fully realize our mission and vision, the Natural History Museum must reinvent itself within a structure that both inspires and enables its staff and visitors to become stewards of their natural and cultural worlds. I hope you will participate in this process as we define a team dedicated to creating a New Museum for a new century.

--RFQ: Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County,
Los Angeles (2001)

* * *

Because the new SALA facility will not only accommodate learning but also serve as an enduring lesson in design and maintenance, it should embody the highest possible architectural and environmental design excellence. The project should be convivial, beautiful, and sustainable, humane and functional, and responsive to the identity of Penn State University and the cultural and natural forces in the region.

--RFP: SALA Building, Penn State University,
University Park, Pa. (2000)

Project Objectives
Environmental sensitivity or high-performance characteristics should be part of the project objectives if the client places a high priority on those aspects of the project. If the client has technical expertise, it may be able to develop the objectives in detail. If not, broader objectives may be suggested here, with the assumption that articulating these specifically will be part of the early project work by the consultants.

Sample language of specific objectives (referencing design strategies):

While any type of environmentally sound innovative building technology may be proposed, the City is particularly interested in technologies that address the following:
  • Ecological site design; on-site erosion control, water purification/pollution reduction, and stormwater management (bioswales, ecoroofs, stormwater filtration, etc.)
  • Transportation: promoting bicycle, pedestrian, and transit use
  • Waste reduction: building reuse, job site recycling, and efficient use of materials
  • On-site management of sewage and organic wastes, such as graywater systems and biological wastewater treatment
  • Energy efficiency: efficient thermal envelopes, efficient space and water heating, lighting, controls and monitoring, and appliances
  • Renewable energy: photovoltaics, geothermal pumps, wind turbines, micro-turbines, and fuel cells
  • Water efficiency, both domestic and irrigation, including rainwater harvesting for irrigation and toilet flushing
  • Materials and resources:
    • Durable building envelopes and long-lived materials or assemblies
    • Recycled-content materials
    • FSC-certified woods
    • Safer, less toxic materials, such as alternatives to CCA-treated wood
    • Innovative application of natural materials (characterized by low embodied energy, local availability, good performance, biodegradable, safe, esthetic) such as straw, earth, and other composites
  • Indoor environmental quality, pollution reduction, worker and occupant safety, air cleaning, humidity control, and thermal comfort
  • Operations and maintenance:
    • Monitoring of energy, water, waste, air quality and transportation use
    • Resource-efficient building operations practices.

--RFP: City of Portland Green Investment Fund, Grants for Affordable Housing,
Portland, Ore. (2002)

Qualifications and Experience
A detailed explanation of the consultant personnel qualifications should be a part of the submittal, and this should include resumes, certification issues, and other relevant background.

Current architectural practice, in general, is multidisciplinary and integrative. Comprehensive or holistic sustainable design processes push these characteristics to a greater degree. The request language can help specify that the client is expecting a very broad and inclusive team at the outset of a project (whereas a conventional project might pull some of those team members along the way).

Here is some sample language requesting a more integrative, multidisciplinary process than a conventional project might employ:

The Poudre School District believes that an integrated design approach can greatly increase the chance of success of meeting sustainable design goals without getting indigestion. Traditional design approaches to the construction of facilities has largely been a linear process. The architect progresses from conceptual/schematic design to design development to construction documents to contract administration while pulling in technical consultants along the way. Integrated design employs a multidisciplinary approach where all project stakeholders are involved in the design process from start to finish on a collaborative basis. The process recognizes that a design decision made unilaterally may have a major impact on achieving sustainable design goals.

--RFP: Poudre School District Prototype Elementary School,
Fort Collins, Colo. (2000)

Sample language for specific qualifications desired:

An important goal of the Authority is to develop an environmentally responsible building on the Site that can serve as a model for high-rise residential construction in this region and elsewhere. The Authority's policy is to implement financially feasible, technologically sound strategies to conserve energy and to surpass current norms for water conservation, waste management/recycling and the quality of the indoor environment (including quality of indoor air, light, acoustics and personal controllability of building systems). The Authority will require that such strategies be fully explored in the development of the Site. Specifically, the Authority will require schematic designs for the building to be analyzed by an experienced consultant using energy use computer simulation model such as DOE-2. The results of this analysis will be used to determine whether alternative design choices could increase the energy efficiency of the building, and what the incremental cost/benefit of these alternatives would be over the life of the building. The DOE-2 analysis would be repeated during the design process at design development phase and upon preparation of construction drawings. The Authority is prepared to assist the Developer in applying for any available funding from the New York State Energy Research and Development Authority to help defray the cost of this analysis as well as the incremental cost of incorporating energy efficiency measures in the building design.

--RFP: Site 18A, Battery Park City Authority Residential Development and Design,
New York City (2000)

Clients may invite respondents to include a list of environmental conferences, seminars, workshops, and professional meetings attended by team members in recent months or years and a list of firm members actively involved in the local, state, or national level of the American Institute of Architects' (AIA) Committee on the Environment (COTE) or similar efforts such as the U.S. Green Building Council.

Requests that get too specific with past examples, such as "provide three examples of medium-size conference centers," open the door to specialized or very large firms only; "similar in scope and scale" is more appropriate wording.

Services Required and Approach
This section should articulate what the client wants the consultant to do. In most cases, it is recommended that clients ask respondents to describe their own approaches and processes, rather than ask them to follow the issuing client's process. Such descriptions can be useful when comparing consultants. In addition, respondents with expertise in sustainable design may suggest a sophisticated or tailored approach the client might not have considered.

Sample language of specialized services required:

Demonstrated ability to provide green building consulting and design services for public and commercial buildings. These services can be provided by the proposed by the proposed firm or individual, as well as through the use of specialized subcontractors. Firms and individuals responding to this RFQ will be required to submit information specifying in which of the following areas they can provide expert services:
  • Recycled-content and sustainable building product selection, specification, and procurement
  • Waste reduction strategies, such as construction and demolition waste management plans and specifications, deconstruction plans and specifications, storage and collection of recyclables, and other reuse opportunities
  • Use of the U.S. Green Building Council's LEED Green Building Rating System to guide project design
  • Design charrettes for projects using the U.S. Green Building Council's LEED Green Building Rating System
  • Development of design guidelines and master specifications for public agencies
  • Partnering opportunities in building projects with organizations such as DOE and PG&E
  • Use of creative financing for green buildings
  • Green operating and maintenance plans
  • Commissioning a green building
  • Energy modeling and analysis
  • Monitoring and tracking of final projects once they are operational (tracking back to original models).

--RFQ: Green Building Assistance, Alameda County Waste Management Authority,
San Leandro, Calif. (2002)

Scope of the Project

This section should outline the key phases of work, critical deliverables, and other tasks that will need to be completed as part of the project work, including the following:

  • Project vision articulation
  • Site and resource analysis
  • Project programming
  • Contract documents
  • Schematic (or concept) design
  • Design development
  • Construction management
  • Building commissioning and close-out.

For more information, see The Architect's Handbook of Professional Practice (John Wiley & Sons, 2001). (Order at the AIA Store or use a copy in AIA offices around the country.)

Budget

Inclusion of construction budget information, even if just a range, will result in responses far more valuable to the organization. Without any budget parameters, consultants will be forced to speculate (low and high), which can lead to a less-focused response.

Green buildings typically require some additional services and result in additional deliverables. In most cases, additional costs are paid for within a few years based on energy savings and other factors. Aggressive efforts may require longer-term payback analyses.

Submission Requirements

The request should include a list of the submittal components as well specific directions for submission and clear rules about deadlines. The submittal could include (but may not be limited to) some or all of the following:

  • Cover letter
  • Introduction to the firm and team
  • Explanation of approach, philosophy
  • Explanation of work to be performed
  • Project schedule (based on some dates provided)
  • Resumes of key personnel
  • List of green design "tools" that the team would use (and why they are appropriate)
  • Lists of subconsultants and their qualifications
  • Statement of qualifications
  • Compensation (broken down by phase) or fee structure
  • Sample projects and other relevant experience
  • References.

Evaluation Methodology

The request should include the evaluation criteria that will be used to select the consultant as well as who will be doing that evaluating. If the client plans to weight certain criteria more heavily than others, that weighting system should be spelled out in detail for respondents.

LEED, the USGBC's Green Building Rating System, is growing in use, but there are still only a sprinkling of LEED-certified buildings throughout the country. Requiring firms to show LEED-certified buildings of the same type or scale as the project in question may result in a low number of responses. But there are other ways that LEED can be useful. Project team members may include LEED-accredited professionals (and the RFP could require this). The RFP could also ask that the team be familiar with the use of LEED as a tool to help guide the project. This approach, regardless of whether the project become LEED registered or eventually certified, can help ensure that some of the many issues involved with sustainable design are considered and addressed.

The client may also want to compare team based on what other tools they have experience with, such as DOE-2 software to create energy profiles, Green Building Advisor, Energy 10, Energy Plus, and more.

Contractual Information

See the AIA Handbook for guidelines on contractual information that should be included. (Order at the AIA Store or use a copy in AIA offices around the country.) The client may choose to identify whether its team plans to use current AIA Owner-Architect agreements or its own contracts.

SAMPLE REQUESTS

Several institutions and organizations have agreed to let us post their requests. They appear here in PDF format. (Adobe Acrobat Reader is required to view PDF files, and is available to download free of charge.)

Educational

Cultural/Civic/Municipal
Full article continues at: American Institute of Architects Green RFP

EcoProperty.ca offers Ecological & Organic Property and Land for Sale, Commercial, Residential, Farms

Ecological and organic property, housing and land -- homes, cottages and properties for sale, rent or to share -- from across Canada and beyond.

Ecological property in Canada
.



Ecological &
Organic Property · Land · Commercial · Residential · Farms
· Gardens · Retreats · Green Businesses

Deep Green Design from RFP Magazine

Deep Green Design

article from: RFPmagazine.com

Issue 33 - August 07



Creating buildings that integrate seamlessly and benignly into their local environment could pave the way for a sustainable future.

Two statistics demonstrate the impact that building design in Asia can have in the global effort to achieve environmental sustainability. Globally, buildings are estimated to account for 30 percent of energy usage and carbon emissions. At the same time, more than half of the world’s new construction is taking place in Asia. Clearly there is a huge opportunity for the industries that make up the built environment to put the right foot forward.

The question that seems to be on everybody’s lips is: “Who will take responsibility for driving this change?” Is it the developers and building owners who should take the lead, the clients and consumers who should drive the demand, or the governments who should legislate? However, designers and architects are emerging as the leaders, mainly because they are the initial creators of the buildings we use. Increasingly it appears that without their vision and expertise, even the will to change cannot create an environmentally sound building.

integrating with nature

Dr Ken Yeang, principal of Llewelyn Davies Yeang (UK) and author of numerous books on ecodesign, has long championed the concept of environmental integration through architecture. He believes that design must begin by looking at nature and imitating its properties and processes. Yeang points out how nature’s systems re-use and recycle all waste, and says that “our built environment can and should imitate ecosystems.”

This process of ecodesign, says Yeang, “is designing the built environment as a system within the natural environment.” Following this, good eco-design is that which maximizes interaction between the natural (organic) and artificial (inorganic). This is the guiding precept behind Yeang’s approach, which uses a number of architectural strategies to blend and enhance this connection, connecting the outside environment with the very structure of the building.

misperception

This approach should not be confused with the common concept of ecodesign as a technological endeavour, says Yeang. He believes strongly that “we must not be misled by the popular perception that if we assemble enough eco-gadgetry we will instantaneously have an ecological architecture.” Instead, he states, the built environment should be balanced by “incorporating greater levels of bio-mass, ameliorating bio-diversity and ecological connectivity”.

zero-energy means zero carbon emissions

Another approach that is essential in ecodesign is zero-carbon design. While this concept has often been regarded as impractical, one Indian architectural collective is offering a uniquely Asian approach that is pushing the boundaries of zero-carbon. Manit Rastogi, Principal, Morphogenesis, says that design should take sustainability in all its forms, be it environmental, social, cultural or economic. He points out that nature itself gives us much that we re-create artificially. When looking at designing, he says, “you’ve got light that’s free, wind that’s free, climatic conditions that can be used. The question is: How much do we need to moderate it and how can we moderate it? That’s the starting point for zero energy buildings. We build it bottom up from there.”

Rastogi believes that traditional Asian architecture holds the key, pointing to an evolution driven by a lack of resources to use natural, low-cost solutions. The heart of his design approach goes back to these methods, “looking at how they dealt with that development, learning the principles, then using modern computational techniques and methods to analyze for current demands”.

If a truly global change is to happen, says Rastogi, the global design community must completely re-invent how buildings are created. “The problem of architecture today,” he says, “is that it’s such a highly competitive field that even practices within themselves are not collaborative.” Over the past few years, Rastogi has traveled throughout Asia and abroad, demonstrating successful examples of his architectural approach
.


More suggested reading:

21st Century Architecture

Best Green Stocks Investing Blog

Green Home Building and Sustainable Architecture

Rare Earth Stocks Research

Toronto Modern

Search Green Stocks Investments Funds, Clean Energy Investing Websites

Research publicly-traded renewable energy stocks, wind power companies, geothermal energy investing, water purification stocks, biofuels, tidal energy, wave power and solar energy investments information.

Custom Search

SEO Anchor Text Explained

30green - The Environment Landmark

Architecture Student Chronicles