by Brianna Crandall — March 7, 2012—Architects, building owners, facilities managers and others who are working towards reducing their facilities’ energy consumption and eco-footprint and either considering or pursuing the U.S. Green Building Council’s (USGBC) Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) green building program will be interested in upcoming additions to the program’s Pilot Credit Library.
USGBC’s next update to the LEED 2012 program will include various updates to credits within the LEED Pilot Credit Library. As a flexible, interactive mechanism for testing proposed credits in the marketplace, the Pilot Credit Library gathers real-time feedback on credit usability and ability to meet a credit’s intent.
The Pilot Credit Library was established to facilitate the introduction of new prerequisites and credits to LEED through stakeholder engagement and collaboration on the testing and analysis of proposed requirements, explains USGBC. This process allows USGBC to refine credits through LEED project evaluations before being introduced into LEED, helping the system become “more dynamic and effective.”
LEED 2012, which opened March 1 for third public comment, is the next step towards a global, performance-based application, notes USGBC. The current LEED 2012 draft focuses on increasing the technical rigor of the rating system, improving the user experience, and providing measurement and performance tools. Along with the opening of the public comment period, several key changes within the Pilot Credit Library will be presented.
“As part of the larger evolution of the Materials & Resources credit category, the new pilot credits shift focus towards a more integrated decision making framework based on life cycle assessment,” said Brendan Owens, Vice President, LEED Technical Development. “When considered as an integrated system, the credits encourage actions that move us towards a products universe focused on transparency and multi-attribute life cycle optimization.”
Under the heading of Materials & Resources (MR), Pilot Credits 2 and 11 will combine to form a more encompassing chemical avoidance credit. Pilot Credit 54: Avoidance of Chemicals of Concern in Building Materials, encourages LEED project teams to avoid building materials that contain chemicals that are known to negatively impact human health, specifically in regards to cancer and reproductive toxicity.
In addition to these two credits becoming one, an additional credit will be added, Disclosure of Chemicals of Concern (Pilot Credit 62), which addresses product transparency. Both newly added pilot credits, 54 and 62, will progress to LEED 2012. A pilot credit that addresses alternatives assessments is under development.
Another notable change within MR is a pilot credit split to more directly address product transparency and performance. Pilot Credit 43 is now divided into two credits—Pilot Credit 61: Material Disclosure and Assessment and Pilot Credit 52: Material Multi-Attribute Assessment.
A new Energy Jumpstart concept under the Energy & Atmosphere heading addresses the huge opportunity to reduce carbon emissions and building operational expenses by reaching the 75 percent of the market that the existing buildings energy performance prerequisite excludes, notes USGBC.
“The pilot credit creates an on-ramp for these buildings and we hope to use it to engage project teams and building owners who demonstrate leadership by drastically improving the energy performance of their buildings,” continued Owens.
Pilot Credit 67: Energy & Atmosphere Prerequisite 2 Alternative Compliance Path, or Energy Jumpstart, rewards significant improvement in building energy performance. It enables projects that have documented substantial energy performance improvement to satisfy the requirements of the Energy & Atmosphere Prerequisite 2: Minimum Energy Efficiency Performance and pursue LEED at the Certified level.
Ten additional pilot credits have been introduced into the library, and can be viewed online at the LEED Pilot Credit Library. The library currently contains 36 credits exploring everything from the Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) of building assemblies to bird collision deterrence.
The third public comment documents for LEED 2012 include technical refinements, scorecards and responses to comments from the previous public comment period, as well as a list of pilot credits that have recently been added, revised, or closed. Members of the public can comment on any substantive changes made since the second public comment period until public comment closes on March 20, 2012.