Add “WELL Accredited Professional” to Your List of Achievements

By USGBCMA Communications, More Green Buildings!

WELL is the newest building standard to arrive in the building industry! Get ahead of the curve by getting your Accredited Professional (AP) certification. In this full-day course, we'll be going over topics you'll see on the AP exam, and you'll meet local professionals with whom you can form study groups.


We currently have two upcoming workshops scheduled– pick the one that works best with your schedule!

Thursday, July 28 from 8:30 am to 4:30 pm
Register here or below.

Thursday, August 18 from 8:30 am to 4:30 pm
Register here.

If neither of these work, check back on our Eventbrite page in a month or two!


Other helpful links:
WELL Intro + Discussion
What is WELL? What does it mean for the building industry? Is it worth your time? Get all your questions answered at our introductory session!

WELL AP Exam Registration

Learn more about WELL

Are you a LEED-er in the Building Industry? Make it official: Take the GA Exam!

By USGBCMA Communications, More Green Buildings!

We are offering an Exam Prep Course for the LEED Green Associate Exam!

Wednesday, July 27 from 8:30 am to 4:30 pm
50 Milk Street, “Hemingway” Room

Register here or below.

The day long curriculum is designed to cover the segments of the Green Associate Exam and to lightly cover the AP specialty exams. If you have specific questions regarding a specialty exam, feel free to bring these questions to class and have the instructor cover these identified areas. 

Come join us for this session! We have only had positive feedback and success stories from previous classes.

The Green Associate preparation course will cover most of the material on the LEED Green Associate exam. You should plan to spend an additional 10-20 hours of study time outside of this class. This time will be best spent reviewing the reading materials listed below while paying particular attention to concepts and terminology. The LEED Green Associate Handbook references hundreds of pages of reading materials, while this class will focus primarily on the 106-page LEED Core Concepts Guide.  As part of this fast-tracked course, we will skim some reading materials and skip other reading materials.  

Students who have passed the exam have reported that local study partners and/or study groups have been very helpful. This is your chance to meet local professionals in the same boat as you!

Hope to see you there. LEED on!

Meet the Summer Interns!

By USGBCMA Communications, More Green Buildings!

We have a full house this summer, with THREE interns keeping things running smoothly at USGBC MA. Read their profiles below!


Rachael Berry

University of Connecticut, Class of 2018
Digital Media and Design

As a lover of the outdoors, I knew I wanted to use my design background and skills to support an meaningful environmental project. I am currently pursuing a degree in Digital Media and Design at the University of Connecticut, and I'm fascinated with emerging technologies and all aspects of Design.

I hope to bring a unique skill set to USGBC MA and an energetic attitude to the team this summer. I enjoy surfing, running, painting and traveling. 

 


Ritchie Lafaille

University of Massachusetts, Lowell, Class of 2019
Civil Engineering

Growing up in Haiti, I have always been amazed by innovation. I observed people making great things and solving many problems with very little resources. However, like many other countries, Haiti needs improvements in the construction and maintenance of buildings, bridges, roads, and water supply systems. The need of such renovation around the globe inspires me to pursue a career in Civil Engineering. I dream of travelling the world and bringing an impact where needed.

I am very excited to be working as an intern at USGBC MA where I constantly learn about green buildings and sustainability and get to meet people. This experience is very beneficial for both my learning and career goals. This summer will be great!

 


Belinda Xian

Tufts University, Class of 2018
Civil Engineering

I grew up reading Ranger Rick and spending time outdoors, so I've always been interested in making society more sustainable and environmentally-friendly. In high school, I chose Civil Engineering so I could impact the world in the physically largest way possible, and I haven't looked back since! Working with USGBC to spread interest in green building and sustainability is definitely something I'm looking forward to.

In my free time, I enjoy painting, reading, and nagging friends and family members to recycle properly. I look forward to an exciting summer here!

The Old Oak Dojo: the Perfect Place to Spend a Summer Sunday

By USGBCMA Communications, More Green Buildings!


Experience a living building! FREE for members and $10 for non-members.

Sunday, July 24 from 3:00pm to 4:30pm
14 Chestnut Place, Boston, MA 02130
(Jamaica Plain)

Register here or below.

Come join us for an intimate tour of this very special facility. The Old Oak Dojo is the first living building in Boston and we will gather the Collaborative for a summer meeting to connect and celebrate this special achievement.

The Living Building Challenge is a building certification program, advocacy tool and philosophy that challenges us to ask the question, What if every single act of design and construction made the world a better place?

In April 2016, the Old Oak Dojo became one of the first 11 buildings in the world to be LBC-certified. On the fourth Sundays of the month, we can tour the space. We’ll be able to see all the salvaged materials, rainwater harvesting, indoor compost toilet, urban permaculture gardens, and more.


Learn more about the Old Oak Dojo on its website. We hope to see you there in a few weeks!

image sources: http://trimtab.living-future.org/case-study/old-oak-dojo/ and http://oldoakdojo.com/living-building-challenge/

 

BREEAM in the USA

By USGBCMA Communications, More Green Buildings!

All these new building standards making your head spin? Learn about LEED's British cousin, BREEAM!

Register here or below.

Wednesday, July 20 from 8:30 AM to 10:00 AM
50 Milk Street, “Aristotle” Room

BREEAM is the world's leading sustainability assessment method for master planning projects, infrastructure and buildings. It addresses a number of lifecycle stages such as New Construction and Refurbishment with a special emphasis on In-Use structures.

With a focus on sustainable value and efficiency, BREEAM certified developments make attractive property investments and create environments that enhance the well-being of the people who live and work in them. The core technical standards and processes of BREEAM USA will be discussed as well as its comprehensive, scientific approach to building sustainability. 

BREEAM USA is a partnership between BuildingWise, the award-winning US-based LEED certification consultancy, and BRE Group, the international provider of robust, independent, third party certification of fire, security and environmental products and services.

What's WELL and What's It Mean for the Building Industry?

By USGBCMA Communications, More Green Buildings!

To get back in the loop with your building standards, come to our Introduction to WELL

Register here or below.

Tuesday, July 19 from 8:30 AM to 10:30 AM
50 Milk Street, “Aristotle” Room

The WELL Building Standard was recently created to help design buildings that are better for human health. We anticipate that this building standard will greatly impact the building process and the types of buildings that are constructed in the future.

To bring as many people up to speed with this new standard, we have organized an introductory session at our headquarters. This session will be beneficial for professionals from all sectors of the building industry: owners, engineers, builders and occupants interested in the new standard are encouraged to attend!

Advocacy Update: Senate bill seeks bigger strides toward renewable energy base

By Matt Murphy

Click here for the full article.

STATE HOUSE — The Massachusetts Senate plans an aggressive approach to bolstering the state’s power supplies with renewable resources like hydropower and offshore wind, proposing legislation on Friday that would go further than the House to require the purchase of 2,000 megawatts of offshore wind and roughly 1,500 megawatts of other clean energy resources.

The bill, which has been scheduled for debate in the Senate thisThursday, would also encourage utilities to purchase energy storage systems to maximize the value of the new clean energy generation, and includes provisions to support improved energy efficiency in homes.

Senate Ways and Means Chairwoman Karen Spilka and Sen. Benjamin Downing, the co-chair of the Telecommunications, Utilities and Energy Committee, held a briefing on the bill on Friday, June 24 as it was being polled through committee.

The bill (S 2372) would require utilities to solicit long-term contracts of between 15 years and 20 years for 2,000 megawatts of offshore wind by 2030, well beyond the 1,200 megawatts proposed in the House bill.

Spilka said the bill would also encourage the offshore wind industry to make Massachusetts a base of operation, fostering job growth and economic development in parts of the state and creating new advanced manufacturing opportunities for energy storage systems. “It’s written to really foster open competitive bidding and especially in the case of offshore wind to encourage economic development,” Spilka said.

In addition to offshore wind, Senate leaders are proposing a separate procurement of roughly 1,500 megawatts of clean energy generation from other sources, including hydropower, onshore wind, energy storage, anaerobic digestion, solar and others.

The push on Beacon Hill to diversify the state’s energy portfolio comes at time when policymakers are trying to prepare for the loss in coming years of 10,000 megawatts of power generation from the closure of fossil fuel plants and Pilgrim Nuclear Power Station.

With the state heavily reliant on natural gas for its energy, lawmakers are trying to shift the market towards clean energy to help meet pollution reduction mandates under the Global Warming Solutions Act without driving up already high New England energy prices.

“I think if we do not act, prices will continue to be incredibly volatile in Massachusetts. We’ve seen this over time that prices are very weather-dependent and our over-reliance on natural gas leaves us exposed to that,” Downing said. The Pittsfield Democrat said the bill should “stabilize” costs in the short-term.

Environmental League of Massachusetts President George Bachrach, who has been promoting a bill that would embody what Gov. Charlie Baker refers to as a “combo platter” of energy options, offered his support Friday morning.

“New reports show Boston will be drowning as temperatures and sea levels rise. We urgently need more energy, but it must be clean energy. The Senate bill will increase energy from offshore wind with sufficient scale to reduce costs for customers while creating manufacturing and high-tech jobs in our state. It ensures onshore wind, hydro and local renewables will make up a big part of our energy portfolio,” Bachrach said.

It will likely be challenging for House and Senate leaders to agree on a consensus energy bill prior to the July 31 end of formal sessions since there are already many differences with between the House and Senate bills, with the Senate likely to tack on more differences during floor debate next week. Branch leaders sparred for months this session over solar energy policy, but leaders have also identified this larger energy bill as a priority for passage this year.

What's Happening in July? Tours, Educational Sessions, and a BBQ!

By USGBCMA Communications, More Green Buildings!

Interested in WELL, LEED, BREEAM, or all three?? We're hosting educational sessions and exam prep on these building standards– check them out below!

Want images and helpful descriptions? Read the full newsletter here!

WELL Intro + Discussion (Tues, 7/19, morning)

BREEAM in the USA (Wed, 7/20, morning)

LEED GA Exam Prep (Wed, 7/27, full day)

WELL AP Exam Prep (Thurs, 7/28, full day)

 

We're also hosting tours and events in green buildings! You could tour and network in 75 State Street, and celebrate green building in the Living Building Challenge-certified Old Oak Dojo!

75 State Street Building Tour + Networking Night (Thurs, 7/21, evening)

Old Oak Dojo Tour ( Sun, 7/24, afternoon)

 

Coming up in August, September, and October are some other events to check out!

Living Building Challenge Tour: Hampshire College + Hitchcock Center (Fri, 8/12, afternoon)

Green Building Showcase 2016 (Thurs, 9/22, evening)

Greenbuild 2016 (Wed 10/5 – Fri 10/7)

 


Want images and helpful descriptions? Read the full newsletter here!

Transforming What it Means to be Green in Affordable Housing

By Mike Davis, Boston LISC

Deploying energy solutions so all Massachusetts residents benefit from a clean energy economy.

Earlier this spring, the Local Initiatives Support Corporation’s (LISC) Massachusetts Green Retrofit Initiative reached a milestone as 10 of our 20 multifamily affordable housing partners signed onto the Better Buildings Challenge (BBC). Started by the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development, the BBC provides ongoing technical expertise and support for building owners who commit to a 20% portfolio-wide energy reduction over 10 years. Combined, our 10 leaders own and operate over 22,000 units of housing across Massachusetts, and are transforming what it means to be green for the rest of the affordable housing sector.

But how did we get here? Thanks to the support of the Barr Foundation, more than six years ago LISC created the Green Retrofit Initiative, a program with a goal to accelerate Massachusetts’ multifamily affordable housing owners toward an efficient, clean-energy future. Through this initiative, LISC connected owners to energy efficiency and renewable energy funding options and provided them with technical expertise. Our building science partner, New Ecology, Inc., helped owners analyze their housing portfolios’ baseline energy use, and develop and implement strategic plans to accomplish their desired energy savings goals.

The results have been impressive. Through the Initiative, owners have successfully navigated Massachusetts’ complex utility programs to realize consistent and predictable energy efficiency improvements. From 2012 to 2015, participants experienced average savings of 29% for electric projects and 23% for gas projects. Overall, we have worked with 50 multifamily affordable housing owners across the state to benchmark 17,000 units, retrofit more than 5,000 units, and leverage more than $17 million in financing.

The experiences of participating building owners have also informed LISC’s work to inform smart policies for energy efficiency and renewable technologies for low- and moderate- income housing. We believe that the golden moment to achieve deeper energy efficiency savings and to incorporate long-lasting clean energy technologies is when an affordable housing project is slated for a substantial rehabilitation. This happens only every 15 to 20 years. So, the critical policy question is, how can we make sure it’s easier for affordable housing owners to pursue deeper energy efficiency savings and clean-energy technologies during this window of opportunity?

We believe the golden moment to achieve deeper energy efficiency savings is at the time of an affordable housing project’s substantial rehabilitation.

Our current work is dedicated to answering this question. We believe the first step is for owners to know exactly which efficiency and clean energy measures will work best for them and their specific projects. This requires comprehensive energy audits in the design process to illuminate what is possible. The second step is to collaborate with the state’s housing finance agencies, utilities, and other partners to make sure that, once owners know the best options for them, they will have a predictable source of funding to implement those deeper efficiency and clean energy measures.

LISC applauds all its Green Retrofit Initiative owners for their leadership and efforts in greening the affordable housing sector across the state. We look forward to continuing this work—supporting owners on the ground, while also ensuring that policy discussions are informed by their stories and experiences, so that all Massachusetts residents benefit from a clean energy economy.

In the photo above, Clifton Geissler, director of maintenance, Maloney Properties, Inc., and Dariela Maga, housing project manager, Allston Brighton Community Development Corporation, are pictured in their Allston–Brighton green retrofit project.

The Green Retrofit Initiative (GRI) is a program designed to help affordable housing owners navigate our state’s utility programs to achieve energy efficiency savings. In partnership with our building science expert,New Ecology, Inc., LISC Boston has worked with over 50 multifamily affordable housing owners statewide to benchmark a total of 17,000 units, retrofit more than 5,000 units, and leverage over $17 million. The Green Retrofit Initiative’s approach has demonstrated that energy and water retrofits can consistently result in 20 percent energy savings.

Read the original article here: https://www.barrfoundation.org/blog/transforming-what-it-means-to-be-gre…

Next Month: WELL and LEED Exam Prep Courses!

By USGBCMA Communications, More Green Buildings!

Need help preparing for the WELL AP or LEED GA Exam? You're in luck! We're hosting day-long exam prep courses. Learn with us and meet potential study partners!

LEED Exam Prep will also have time at the end for questions about specific LEED AP Exams.


WELL Exam Prep:

July 28 from 8:30 am to 4:30 pm

WELL is the newest building standard to arrive in the building industry! Get ahead of the curve by getting your Accredited Professional (AP) certification. This day-long course will cover in depth all you need to know for the exam.
Register here.

 


LEED Exam Prep:

July 27 from 8:30 am to 4:30 pm

The LEED Exam Prep Course is a comprehensive course which will prepare attendees for the Green Associate and other specialty exams. The day long curriculum is designed to cover the segments of the Green Associate Exam and to lightly cover the AP specialty exams.
Register here.

 

If these workshop times don't fit in your schedule, check here for future course times.