Healthy Materials Summit 2016 Afternoon Session: Living Building Challenge

By Alexander Landa


There's a lot going on with the Healthy Materials Summit next week. Between networking sessions, workshops, panels, speakers, and more, you'll have busy day for sure. From 1PM-5PM, Shawn Hesse and ILFI's Dr. Greg Norris will be speaking at the ILFI Living Product Challenge.

This event will feature an Understanding the Living Product Challenge presentation delivered by Dr. Norris, to be followed by a free Cocktail Reception courtesy of Mohawk Industries.

The production, use, and disposal of products – in buildings and beyond – is the major way that humanity is unwittingly fraying the web of life. The Living Product Challenge was launched by the International Living Future Institute in April 2015 to further pursue a materials economy that is non-toxic, transparent and socially equitable. Designers of Living Products must go further than typical manufacturers, using human creativity and ecological inspiration to design products that create positive handprints while shrinking negative footprints. These “handprints” measure the positive impacts that a product cause across its life cycle, such as harvesting more water and generating more energy than was required to make it. While a product's footprint can never be reduced to zero, the product can still be Net Positive if its handprint is bigger than its footprint. Getting to the goal of truly restorative products requires unprecedented levels of innovation and collaboration, across supply chains, industries, disciplines and lifecycles.

This session includes a brief overview of the Living Product Challenge and then will dive into Handprinting. It will explore what handprinting means for organizations today and look at positive real-life examples of successful handprinting methods. It will seek to inspire participants to join in the challenge, and to answer questions about how they can do so.

This is approved for 4 CEU's. (AIA, GBCI, LFA).

Learning Objectives:

  1. Understand what a handprint means and how it differs from a footprint.

  2. Understand the Living Product Challenge framework and how handprinting is a part of that system.

  3. Understand how product lifecycles can “give more than they take” and how to encourage positive impacts.

  4. Learn about the development and implementation of real-life organizational handprints.

The Healthy Materials Summit is a unique event that doesn't compare to anything else in the market. Please signup to become part of the premiere materials summit in the Northeastern US. Not only will you personally benefit from becoming an expert on healthy materials, but you will become a massive catalyst of change in the bigger picture. Future generations will be thankful that we're now focusing so much on our environment, and focusing on the literal building blocks of new designs will help to propel a safer tomorrow.

Earn Four Hours of AIA/LEED Credentials by Going to the Healthy Materials Summit Next Week!

By Alexander Landa


You know what's lame? Sitting at a computer watching a webinar that covers stuff you already know. You know what's fun? Hanging out at Google's Kendall Square HQ, learning about the increasingly important topic of healthy materials, and networking with other cool people. We can help! If you go to the Healthy Materials Summit morning session next Wednesday, October 26th in Cambridge, you can earn four hours towards maintaining your LEED and/or AIA credentials. That's right. If you're LEED certified you get four hours. If you're AIA certified you get four hours. If you're both, well, you guessed right – four towards each. That's all pretty awesome.

You can register here for the Healthy Materials Summit. By signing up for the morning session, you earn four credential hours. Sweet deal.

The Healthy Materials Summit will feature a half-day ‘un-conference’ event which invites leaders from the business, design, and institutional communities to get together to learn concepts, brainstorm strategies, and set a regional agenda for healthy materials. Our hope is this event will equip these diverse communities with the tools they need to move forward in a way which promotes healthy buildings and generates a demand for healthy materials regionally. Boston and New England are uniquely configured to lead the promotion of healthy buildings, as we are one of the largest cities in the US, we have the highest per capita percentage of designers in the US, our economy hinges on stakeholders who value and promote human health (hospitals, universities, corporations).We are one of the greenest cities in the world.

4 AIA Learning Objectives:

1) Understand the development within the industry towards healthy materials
2) Analyze the relationship between healthy materials and sustainability within high-performance design
3) Gain perspective on reporting mechanisms of HPDs and EPDs.
4) Be able to better understand the complexities of going redlist free.

Also for those who are LEED accredited, this is LEED/GBCI approved.

*You need to attend the entire four-hour morning session to get the full four hours towards maintaining certification.

Register here for the Healthy Materials Summit 2016

USGBC MA Sponsored ABX Session A25 – Integrative Design (LEEDv4 IP): Where The Rubber Meets The Road

By Alexander Landa


Coming up November 15th to 17th will be ABX 2016! As part of the Northeast's largest building industry conference and tradeshow, Architecture Boston Expo, the USGBC MA Chapter will be sponsoring multiple panels this year. This year, we're hosting multiple panels, so let's take a look at Tuesday's  second panel, A25: Integrative Design (LEEDv4 IP): Where The Rubber Meets The Road.

For firms pursuing the AIA 2030 Commitment, the Integrative Design Process (IP) can make or break success. How does a team measure its effectiveness? Does good collaboration yield better results? Is IP more than a kick-off charrette? Can IP be achieved in individual project teams if the overall firm culture and methodology isn't aligned with it? USGBC's LEED program now has a credit recognizing IP's importance, but will a LEED credit (again) cause hoop-jumping without providing more value? This workshop is a practical and applied look at how your firm can capture the value provided by institutionalizing IP. Successfully implementing IP requires a clear, shared understanding of what integration means in your firm culture, how individuals in different roles participate and alignment with consultants around your project delivery objectives.

This workshop shares road maps and strategies for embedding IP into daily project management practices. Participants will leave with actionable steps to take immediately. This session will be guided by Barbra Batshalom (Founder & CEO at Sustainable Performance Institute), who will also speak at the Healthy Materials Summit on 10/26.

A25: Integrative Design (LEEDv4 IP): Where the rubber meets the road
Tuesday, 11/15
10:00 AM – 11:30 AM
BCEC Boston

Register here!

Recap of October 19th's LEED Exam Prep Course

By Alexander Landa


On October 19th, 2016, we held an exciting day-long prep course for a LEED accreditation exam. We had a busy day, a full room, a tasty breakfast, and a filling lunch. If you were one of the attendees, then we thank you! If you didn't get a chance to make it, then here's what you missed, and you can register for the next course on November 29th here.

The first half of the day saw Celis Brisbin going over the basics of LEED v4, covering what LEED is, the different titles you can obtain, what you can do with this accreditation, and more. If you're not familiar with LEED at all, then this is the workshop to learn everything from start to finish.

The afternoon session was lead by Matt Smith of The Green Engineer. He walked everyone through many of the specific topics that any LEED Associate needs to know, and what to expect on the exam. The end of the course saw both Celis and Matt going through practice questions; it was clear that the room paid attention and will surely pass!

If you haven't taken a LEED exam yet, then you should definitely attend our next prep course. There were college students and young professionals at this meeting, and they walked out much more confident, especially since they walked in with only ideas of what LEED is.

We hope to see you at the next course! You can also come learn more at the Healthy Materials Summit next week – please register here!



Grey Lee Is Excited For The Healthy Materials Summit Next Week!

By Grey Lee


I love the gathering at the Healthy Materials Summit. It is truly the cream of the crop in our practitioner community. These are the people making decisions and specifying products that will improve the health effects of the designs they are responsible for. The folks I meet at our Summit are truly concerned about the long-term effects of buildings on people. The organizing team of Blake, Steven, and Shawn are real stand-up gentlemen who have convened amazing speakers to help us dig in to the topic.

I always have great conversations and learn a ton. Especially now with the work we're doing related to the Living Product Challenge and the WELL standard, it's exciting to have such a critical mass here in the Boston area. Our community is leading the charge to improve the built environment!

What can we do to improve the effects of buildings on human health? Many employers are starting to explore this situation in order to attract and retain the best talent. Public health studies have identified the ways buildings and workplace design affect productivity and influence a brand. People don't want to be in a building that brings them down or makes them sick. People want to avoid repetitive stress injuries and the effects of long-term exposure to low-level toxins. We can make a difference.

Each year this Summit program to follow advances in the science of buildings and occupant health. Beyond ratings systems, we raise the conversation around wellness and the built environment. Is your organization tuning in to this? Do you have something to demonstrate?

I think you should come out for this one. Join us on 10/26 for a great program.

You can register here for the Healthy Materials Summit 2016.

EPMA October 2016 Meeting Recap – Planning For Halloween, Holidays, And 2017!

By Alexander Landa


This month's EPMA meeting was full of energy! Even for a Monday night, everyone arrived with questions, concerns, and plans for moving the USGBC MA forward.

The night began with a presentation by Aminah McNulty on Permaculture & Dryland Strategies. It's awesome to see that even among all of the areas throughout the world that suffer from drought and difficulty with growing green life, that there are researchers working on ways to combat this, bringing life to barren ground.

From there, we worked on planning future events – some coming up soon, some for the holiday seasons quickly approaching. Be on the lookout for more building tours, workshops, and networking sessions.

The next EPMA monthly meeting will be November 19th – come and join to meet some other emerging professionals and to help push our USGBC Chapter into the future!

Upcoming events:

UMass Boston University Hall Building Tour, 10/20

Healthy Materials Summit, 10/26

Emerging Professionals HallOlympics Networking + Games Night, 10/27

Wow! We've got great sponsors for the Healthy Materials Summit!

By Grey Lee, Executive Director


What a great collection of industry partners. It's exciting to know of so many proponents of sustainability.

Thank you for engaging with us as a community to advance healthy materials in the built environment.

We look forward to seeing you in Cambridge next week!

 

If you haven't registered already, please do so here.

 



USGBC MA Sponsored ABX Session A05: Good Medicine – The WELL Building Standard

By Alexander Landa


Coming up November 15th to 17th will be ABX 2016! As part of the Northeast's largest building industry conference and tradeshow, Architecture Boston Expo, the USGBC MA Chapter will be sponsoring multiple panels this year. This year, we're hosting multiple panels, so let's see the first panel, “A05: Good Medicine: The WELL Building Standard.”

This session will be a broad yet deeper overview of the WELL Building Standard and the certification process. A major focus of this is to cover the medical bases of design and construction strategies that go into creating healthier buildings. Similar to the Healthy Materials Summit, this crash course on healthy materials details not only why materials affect the environment, but it stresses the importance of materials on human health. The WELL Building Standard can act as a solid framework for designing these types of healthier buildings, as it provides the chance and information needed to help design buildings with a human-centered approach.

WELL is a performance-based system for measuring, certifying, and monitoring features of the built environment that impact human health and well-being, through air, water, nourishment, light, fitness, comfort, and mind. Participants will learn the purpose, key components, and structure of the WELL Building Standard.

ABX A05 – Good Medicine: The Healthy Building Standard
Tuesday, 11/15
8:00AM – 9:30AM
BCEC Boston

Register here!

Healthy Materials Summit 2016 Speaker Bio: Doug Brown

By Alexander Landa


With the Healthy Materials Summit 2016 coming up soon, it's time to get to know the speakers. This professional gathering event held at Google's Kendall Square HQ in Cambridge, MA, covers all grounds for understanding healthy materials in the construction process, and why you should care about it. The ultimate goal of the Healthy Materials Summit is to bring the issues relating to building materials into light, in hopes to inspire commercial leaders, designers, and builders, and manufacturers and product vendors to increase their supply and demand of transparent, healthy building materials and products.

Doug Brown is a member of BASF’s North American management team for sustainable development and serves as Business Strategy & Implementation Manager. In his role, Brown is a subject matter expert on sustainability to BASF, serving as the primary intermediary for 12 operating divisions with annual revenue of $19 billion across several industries including; Transportation, Agricultural, Consumer goods, Construction and Packaging. Brown consults with business management teams, providing guidance, expertise and developing tools that to help BASF businesses assess how effectively they leverage sustainability with emphasis on Customer engagement, Innovation & portfolio management, and Commercialization of Technology Developments. He joined BASF in 1997 and has served in various Sales & Marketing leadership roles throughout his career with significant expertise in the construction industry. Brown currently serves on the USGBC HealthBuild Advisory Council and the Board of Directors for the Sustainable Building Industries Council.

It isn't too late to register for the Healthy Materials Summit 2016! You can find more info here.

Wednesday, October 26th, 2016
8:00 AM – 8:00 PM
Google Cambridge Headquarters
5 Cambridge Center
Cambridge, MA, 02142

Healthy Materials Summit 2016 Speaker Bio: Rebecca Calahan Klein

By Alexander Landa


With the Healthy Materials Summit 2016 later this month, it's time to get to know the speakers. This professional gathering event held at Google's Kendall Square HQ in Cambridge, MA, covers all grounds for understanding healthy materials in the construction process, and why you should care about it. The ultimate goal of the Healthy Materials Summit is to bring the issues relating to building materials into light, in hopes to inspire commercial leaders, designers, and builders, and manufacturers and product vendors to increase their supply and demand of transparent, healthy building materials and products.

Rebecca Calahan Klein of Green Health Exchange, is a lifelong social entrepreneur, focused on developing sustainable business strategies for leading global companies, and building social enterprises. Rebecca has served as a sustainable business consultant for companies, including Alcan, Clif Bar, Ford Motor Company, General Motors, Johnson and Johnson, Levi Strauss and Company, Nike, Nordstrom, and Target. She has built and scaled sustainability focused non-profits including Businesses for Social Responsibility, Organic Exchange, and 1% for the Planet. At Organic Exchange, she helped create a $4 billion market for organic cotton products, by aggregating demand from large brands and retailers including Nordstrom, Nike, Patagonia, Marks & Spencer, Target, H&M, C&A, and Walmart, and helping them create committed, transparent, fair, and sustainable value chains with hundreds of manufacturing partners and more than 250,000 organic cotton farmers around the world. She served as a policy advisor to Governors Bruce Babbitt of Arizona and Michael Dukakis of Massachusetts.

It isn't too late to register for the Healthy Materials Summit 2016! You can find more info here.

Wednesday, October 26th, 2016
8:00 AM – 8:00 PM
Google Cambridge Headquarters
5 Cambridge Center
Cambridge, MA, 02142