Welcome our Newest Sponsor, CivicSolar!

By USGBCMA Communications, More Green Buildings!


We are excited to welcome CivicSolar as our newest Bronze-Level Sponsor!

CivicSolar, Inc. is an innovative solar distributor providing equipment and services to meet the unique needs of solar installers and developers. The company’s products are used in residential solar homes, commercial solar systems, and grid tied systems; and off grid solar PV applications, such as RVs and boats. Based in San Francisco, CivicSolar also has a Boston office. 

CivicSolar negotiates costs directly with global manufacturers in order to pass savings onto customers. They have partnered with over 100 of the industry's leading and most trusted system manufacturers, and their equipment has all been pre-qualified based on reliability and performance history.

Customer service is a major focus at CivicSolar. The company focuses on providing customers with the best equipment and value in the business, along with engineering experience, installation know-how, and web tools.

Welcome to our sponsor community, CivicSolar! We are excited to see what type of projects you work on in the future!

WinnDevelopment Begins $15.5 Million Adaptive Reuse Project to Create Market Rate Housing in Historic Mill Buildin

By Ritchie Lafaille, Office Fellow

WinnCompanies, an award-winning multifamily property development and management company, announced that WinnDevelopment has secured the financing it needs to transform the 170-year-old Adden Building in Lowell, MA, into 75 apartments by the summer of 2017.

 

The $15.5 million adaptive reuse project completes a three-building residential development effort that began a decade ago and comes one week after WinnDevelopment was tapped as Master Developer for the Hamilton Canal District, a vacant 15-acre parcel abutting the Adden Building site that will double the size of Lowell’s downtown.

 

“The project marks the homestretch of our effort to transform the three historic mill buildings on this property into vibrant communities that support Lowell’s future,” said Larry Curtis, President and Managing Partner of WinnDevelopment. “We’re proud to be a part of this revitalization and we look forward to continuing our partnership with the City on the next phase of work in the Hamilton Canal District.”

 

The Adden development will produce 73 market rate apartments and two units restricted to households with incomes at or below 60% of Area Median Income. The unit mix will consist of 47 one-bedrooms, 11 one-bedrooms with dens and 17 two-bedrooms.


Construction on the 88,000-square-foot building is expected to start immediately and be concluded by the summer of 2017. The project will create approximately 300 jobs. Dellbrook Construction is the general contractor. The architect is The Architectural Team, Inc.

 

The project is a joint venture between WinnDevelopment, Banc of America CDC and the Architectural Heritage Foundation. It is being financed through State Historic Tax Credits, Federal Historic Tax Credits, the Housing Development Incentive Program (HDIP), Enterprise Bank, the City of Lowell (HOME Funds), Preservation Massachusetts, HCL Acquisitions and WinnCompanies.

 

The Adden Building sits between two other award-winning adaptive reuse projects: Counting House Lofts, a 90,242-square-foot former mill converted into a 52-unit mixed-income development with commercial space is fully occupied by Metta Clinic, a subsidiary of the Lowell Community Health Center; and, Loft Two Seven, a mixed-income community featuring 173 SoHo style lofts that sits alongside the canal at the back of the property.

Meet our Members: Aminah McNulty

By USGBCMA Communications, More Green Buildings!


Aminah is an active member of our Emerging Professionals Committee and the design community! Read her profile below:

Growing up in the San Francisco Bay Area, I've been immersed in sustainability issues for most of my life. I enjoy my volunteer work with the USGBC Emerging Professionals Committee, where I have been the Service Chair since organizing the EPMA’s annual Charles River Clean Up in March. This is an inspiring platform through which I hope to create a meaningful impact in my community.

Since graduating from Mount Holyoke College in 2014, with my degree in Environmental Studies and Architecture, I've worked in Boston with the Landscape Architecture team at Brown, Richardson & Rowe, Inc. I have some international exposure to current projects in sustainable design and restoration and am especially interested in how holistic design can facilitate healthy communities, equitable access, connection to local culture, and an understanding of place and climate.

I am currently working to connect different organizations, including USGBC, International Living Future Institute and the BSA Women in Design Committee to further a conversation on equity, inclusion and intersectionality in design.

If you would like to be featured in a member profile, please let us know by shooting us an email at communications@usgbcma.org

Get Inspired by the Living Building Challenge!

By USGBCMA Communications, More Green Buildings!

You've all heard of using LEED to certify buildings, but there's a new building standard in town! The Living Building Challenge is much more rigorous and has the ultimate goal of creating buildings that are essentially part of nature.

Tuesday, June 21 from 8:30 AM to 10:30 AM
50 Milk Street, “Dali” Room (14th Floor)

Tickets are only $50 and $65 for Members and Non-Members, and we are also offering Scholarships for students and those working in the non-profit sector. Please email celis@usgbcma.org for more information.

Learn more and register below!

ELM's Earth Night a Success!

By Acadia Center

Last Tuesday, May 31st, the Environmental League of Massachusetts (ELM) hosted their 20th annual Earth Night.

The environmental community of Greater Boston united at the Boston College Club for a night of music, merriment and ways to make a difference for the Massachusetts environment. Pretty cool to be up on the 33rd floor looking out across the geomorphology of the Boston Harbor, Charles River and Mystic River watersheds. 

Grey Lee, the Executive Director of USGBC MA, made an appearance at the event and connected with this outstanding community of environmental advocates.

photo courtesy of Peter Julian Photography.

Congratulations to the Green Star recipients, Representative Steve Kulik, Brad Jones, Katy Eiseman with the Massachusetts PipeLine Awareness Network, and Aggregate Industries for their work to protect the Commonwealth's Environment.

photo courtesy of Peter Julian Photography.

A special thank you to Senator Edward J. Markey for inspiring us with his words and his dedication to our cause.

photo courtesy of Peter Julian Photography.

In the words of ELM President George Bachrach, “Determination to get something done has an edge to it, and that's what ELM is about.”

Grey Lee was caught in a picture with Austin Blackmon, Chief of Energy, Environment and Open Space for the City of Boston, and Senator Markey. We were joking around about doing hard work vs. hardly working (some parts of the government are hardly working)…Grey says, “if I were taking a selfie we would all have been looking in the right spot!”

Sponsor Spotlight: Rubenstein Partners

By USGBCMA Communications, More Green Buildings!


Rubenstein Partners, one of our Silver Sponsors, is a fully integrated real estate investment firm providing first-class investment services, as a Registered Investment Advisor, in office markets throughout the Eastern United States. Many of their office and retail properties are focused on delivering high-quality, sustainable business environments.

Deke Schultze, the Regional Director of New England, served as co-chair of ING Clarion’s Sustainability Task Force, which developed and implemented the firm’s Sustainable Growth Program. This program promoted green building and smart growth best practices across its investment portfolio and corporate operations.

The firm specializes in value-added office investments throughout the Eastern United States. They currently manage two fully discretionary closed-end funds — Rubenstein Properties Fund I, a $475 million private equity fund closed in 2006, and Rubenstein Properties Fund II, a $515 million private equity fund that is in its investment period — as well as some legacy assets related to the firm’s predecessor company.

Rubenstein Partners primarily focuses on complex office real estate investments, including assets requiring major redevelopment or recapitalization.

Recently, Rubenstein Partners has been working on a proposed office building to be built on top of the existing parking garage at 321 Harrison Ave in Boston's South End. The detailed plans and renderings of the approximately 230,000 sf building have just been filed with the Boston Redevelopment Authority.

source: http://www.bostonherald.com/business/real_estate/2016/05/detailed_plans_…

We appreciate their sponsorship and are interested in seeing what type of projects they work on in the future!

LEED Exam Prep is Next Week!

By USGBCMA Communications, More Green Buildings!

If “become a LEED Green Associate” is on your to-do list, now's the time to take action!

USGBC MA is hosting a day of Exam Prep to help you prepare for the Green Associate exam and other specialty exams.

Register here or below.

Wednesday, June 15 from 8:30 AM to 5:00 PM
50 Milk Street, “Woolf” Room

Any professional who is serious about sustainable building should definitely have their LEED Green Associate accreditation. Because we will be transitioning to an updated version of LEED next year, attending this course is the perfect opportunity to get a better grasp of the updated certification information.

If you're already a Green Associate or Accredited Professional, make sure to share this opportunity with your colleagues. 

Read more about the course here or below:

 

Interested in WELL, the Building Standard Focused on Human Health?

By USGBCMA Communications, More Green Buildings!

You're in luck, as USGBC MA will be hosting an introduction and discussion centering on WELL!

Register here or below.

Tuesday, June 28 from 8:30 AM to 10:30 AM
50 Milk Street, “Dali” 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!

The time has come to elevate human health and comfort to the forefront of building practices and reinvent buildings that are not only better for the planet—but also for people. Please join us for this important and informative session.

If you want to deepen your knowledge and become a WELL Accredited Professional, consider joining us for WELL Exam Prep.

Next Week: Learning, Networking, & Refreshments at TROY Boston!

By USGBCMA Communications, More Green Buildings!

Tuesday, June 14, 7:00 pm – 8:30 pm
266 East Berkeley Street Boston, MA 02118

Register here!

It's time for the Chapter's Quarterly Gathering. All our Committees will be attending, and newcomers will have a chance to learn about the many facets of our mission and our work to change the built environment for the better.

This evening of learning will be hosted at TROY Boston, in the South End. TROY is a super eco-friendly apartment complex developed by Chapter Sponsoring Partner Gerding Edlen, a great developer based on the west coast. The complex has attained LEED Gold earlier this year and used 28% less energy than a typical multi-family building like it. We will get to check out many of the features and talk with project team members. We will get to see the rich amenities of this great building and its incredible apartment options.

Join us for this great event to gather our organization — re-connect and make new connections at the same time.

Free for Chapter Members and TROY Boston residents, $25 for the general public.

Click here to learn more and to register.

Refreshments will be provided.

Thank you to Gerding Edlen and TROY Boston for sponsoring this event.

Boston to Host US-China Climate Summit in 2017

By Andrew Ryan

BEIJING — A major climate summit will come to Boston in 2017, putting the city on the world stage as urban leaders from the United States and China work to curb the effects of a warming planet.

Secretary of State John F. Kerry made the announcement Tuesday at this year’s conference in the hazy Chinese capital, declaring that cities like Boston were “in the eye of the climate change storm.”

Kerry’s speech served as a capstone to a climate summit that brought together mayors and other urban leaders from more than 60 cities in the United States and China. The Boston conference in 2017 will be the third such gathering; the first two were hosted by Los Angeles and Beijing.

Kerry said the 2017 conference will give Boston the opportunity to emerge as a global leader in the battle against climate change. Some 2,000 business officials and urban leaders are expected to attend the gathering.

“Boston is a coastal city that understands the threat of rising sea levels and extreme weather,” said Kerry, who recognized Mayor Martin J. Walsh in the audience. “It has already taken extreme steps in order to reduce emissions and mitigate the harmful effects of climate change.”

Hosting environmental leaders from across the globe will be an unprecedented opportunity for Boston businesses and clean energy innovators to expand their reach and influence, said Peter Rothstein, president of the Northeast Clean Energy Council.

“It means that the leading innovators from around the world are going to come here, not just the private sector and labs, but also the cities that are the customers for a lot of these sustainability solutions,” Rothstein said. “They’ll come here for demonstrations but also for their challenges and needs for problems they haven’t solved.”

A conference of this scale “really cements Massachusetts’ reputation as a clean energy leader,” said Peter Shattuck, director of the Massachusetts office of Acadia Center, a nonprofit research and advocacy organization.

“It puts the Massachusetts companies on display,” Shattuck said, pointing to a recent report from the Massachusetts Clean Energy Center showing that the clean energy industry in the state grew by 12 percent in 2015, employing about 100,000 people. “It’s not a given that cleantech will set up shop here. They need to seize opportunity for companies investing billions to relocate to a place like Boston.”

From a tourism perspective, the conference could generate about $1 million in hotel and restaurant spending, said Patrick B. Moscaritolo, president of the Greater Boston Convention and Visitors Bureau.

“That’s a great amount of advertising and promotion of our destination,” Moscaritolo said.

Local environmental leaders said the conference presented a strong opportunity for Boston to show off what successful projects the city has implemented, as well as learn from China about its own policies.

“This is an enormous honor and a clear sign that the policies put in place in Boston and Massachusetts to cut greenhouse gas emissions and grow a clean energy economy are working and are of worldwide significance,” said Ken Kimmel, a former commissioner of the state Department of Environmental Protection.

The host city has an opportunity to set the agenda leading up the summit and can influence policies across the United States, China, and beyond, said Mark Watts, executive director of C40, an alliance of more than 80 global mayors that organizes the conference.

The goal of these summits is to put cities at the forefront of the battle by working together to reduce greenhouse gases. On Tuesday, Walsh signed an agreement to curb emissions on behalf of more than 500 mayors from across the globe. For the first time, the agreement included urban leaders from China, which advocates hailed as a crucial step to halt global warming.

“China didn’t cause climate change. But there’s absolutely no way that we can prevent climate change without leadership in China,” Watts said. “The rate of urbanization here and the scale of energy consumption in cities mean it must happen in [Chinese] cities.”

The agreement requires cities to establish ambitious but achievable goals to curb greenhouse gases. They also report data so each city’s carbon emissions can be tracked and compared.

In Beijing, visiting mayors and other officials took note of the gauzy haze that blurred the horizon in this famously smoggy city. One high-ranking Chinese official acknowledged the challenge ahead, but said the country is making “a relentless effort to make out cities cleaner (and) more beautiful.”

“Despite all the challenges of a developing country, we are doing our best,” said the official, Yang Jiechi, a state councilor. “We have such a huge population in China. We have a burdensome challenge.”

Jiechi and others noted that China had made some strides that put it ahead of the United States. Beijing, for example, has scores of electric cars, and the cities of Nanjing and Shenzhen have thousands of electronic buses.

In conversations with Chinese leaders and local media, Walsh noted that Boston has faced its own environmental challenges, comparing the cleanup of Boston Harbor to the smog that chokes Beijing.

“When government and elected officials and the public put their minds together, we can do great things,” Walsh said. “If we cleaned up the Boston Harbor, they can tackle the air here.”

In a speech to the China-US Climate-Smart/Low-Carbon Cities Summit, Walsh said that there was “no more pressing, or defining, global challenge than climate change.” He noted that as a coastal city, Boston was particularly at risk to rising seas and intensifying storms, and he recalled the city’s record-breaking winter of 108 inches of snow.

“This was no coincidence,” Walsh said. “It was very likely the result of climate change.”