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APPLYING SUSTAINABLE DESIGN PRINCIPLES TO YOUR
BUILDING WILL BENEFIT YOU AND OTHERS AND CAN SAVE
YOU MONEY.
By WAYNE BONHAG
Sustainable and green design is the use
of as many natural, reusable resources as possible
in the design and construction of buildings, in
order to minimize that building’s impact on the
physical and socioeconomic environment. Building
owners, designers, constructors, and operators in
the Upper Valley and throughout New England are
directing their attention to sustainable and green
design. Why? There are at least four good reasons:
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To conserve consumables and resources
like water, energy, and building
supplies. |
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2 |
To lower energy usage and therefore
lower operating costs for the building. |
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3 |
o take advantage of rebates and other
financial rewards for designing,
building, and operating a green
building. This would include the
implementation of energy systems for
combined heat and power, cogeneration,
and other technologies underwritten by
local power companies, the U.S.
Department of Energy, and other federal
and state agencies. |
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4 |
To help maintain construction budgets.
The building that is sustainably
designed and built is one where the
various systems have been carefully
integrated for the good of the whole. As
such, it is very likely that there will
be capital cost savings during the
construction of the project.
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There are no limitations on the type of building
that can be considered for sustainable or green
design—it can be applied to a new building being
built or an existing building being renovated. In
many cases, it is easier to apply sustainable design
technologies to new buildings because some of the
“greener” products that are now on the market can be
more readily applied.
However, the renovation of older facilities, such as
warehouses and factory buildings, are also prime
candidates for sustainable technologies because
there is often a lot of opportunity to upgrade the
existing building envelope and mechanical and
electrical systems.
The most important factor to the success of any
sustainable building project is taking into account
how all of the systems and subsystems of a structure
affect one another, and integrating the design
accordingly. For example, lighter color on the
interior walls reduces the amount of lighting
required in the space; implementation of a berm
around the building reduces the heating or cooling
gain to the building; and orientation of the
building on the site will affect the solar gain on
the building envelope. Because an integrated design
is so essential, any sustainable project will be
better off if the owner’s team meets with
architectural, structural, civil, site,
environmental, mechanical, plumbing, and electrical
engineers from the beginning of a project and
throughout its development. In some cases,
specialists may be brought in to address certain
systems such as noise, solar, green roofing, and
numerical simulation studies; and it is always wise
to have a LEED AP design professional on the design
team from the outset. The construction manager and
commissioning agent should also be brought in at the
initial stages of the project.
The sustainable building project seems to be quite
involved and requires a lot of time and cooperation
from a number of professionals from the very
beginning. Does that mean it will cost more money to
build?
With the proper team, the sustainable building will
not take any longer, nor will it cost more money.
Because there is more time spent resolving design
options at the beginning of the design process, the
alternatives are discussed and finalized early on.
Then it becomes a matter of producing the final
construction documents. With the construction
manager already on board, the building project
begins with accurate construction estimates, project
schedules, and appropriate green or sustainable
materials in place to achieve a sustainable and
green building.
The most important factor when designing a
sustainable building is taking into account how all
of the systems and subsystems will affect one
another.
There is no doubt that sustainable and green
building design is the direction of the future. It
is up to each of us to do our part to encourage the
use of sustainable and green building systems on
every building. It’s the right thing to do.
Green Considerations
The areas of sustainable resources that should be
considered when designing and ultimately building
are extensively listed in the LEED documentation but
they include such items as Sustainable Sites, Water
Efficiency, Energy & Atmosphere, Materials &
Resources, Indoor Environmental Quality, and
Innovation & Design Process. This means that the
design team needs to address such areas as erosion
control, site layout and orientation, landscaping,
storm water runoff systems, water use reduction,
building envelope, use of site conditions to enhance
the building, orientation of building on the site,
wind direction in summer and winter, fenestration,
roofing, solar glazing, passive and active solar
heating. In the mechanical subsystems, things to
consider include using natural ventilation, passive
and active heating, the type of heating and cooling
systems, and controls relating to occupancy. In the
electrical arena, systems such as day lighting and
controlled lighting systems, the use of higher
efficiency lighting technologies and the use of
variable frequency drives with premium efficiency
motors should be considered.
Wayne T. Bonhag, P.E, P.P., LEED AP is the Principal
of Bonhag Associates, PLLC, an innovative consulting
engineering firm located in Lebanon, New Hampshire.
Mr. Bonhag has designed a number of varied,
award-winning sustainable buildings for clients
throughout the United States for residential,
commercial, industrial, educational, and
hospital-healthcare, both in new construction and
renovation of existing facilities. Mr. Bonhag is a
second generation Mechanical, Electrical, and Energy
engineer having worked for such firms as Exxon
Corporation, DuPont, Bristol Myers Squibb, and,
locally, Vermont Gas Systems, Fujifilm, and
Dartmouth College among others. He can be reached at
wbonhag@bonhagassociates.com or at 603-448-5180. |