GRESB Networking Night

By Celis Brisbin, Programs Manager



We are please to partner with USGBC National and EnerNOC and we are excited to learn about the next level of green building market transformation. 

Our friends at EnerNOC are excited to take us on a tour with presenters from GRESB international headquarters. 

The 2015 survey results are out and we want to invite you to join us and our friends at GRESB to review the results together at EnerNOC’s upcoming networking night on September 22nd. Complimentary drinks and appetizers will be served!

Where: EnerNOC Headquarters – 1 Marina Park Drive, Boston, MA

Agenda:

5:15 pm – 6:00 pm   Networking, Drinks and Appetizers

6:00 pm – 6:10 pm  Opening remarks, EnerNOC

6:10 pm – 6:40 pm  2015 GRESB Results and Q&A , Chris Pyke, COO, GRESB

6:40 pm – 7:00 pm  Conversation with Boston Properties

·         Dan Winters, Head of North America, GRESB

·         Amy Gindel, SVP Finance & Planning, Boston Properties

·         Ben Myers, Sustainability Manager, Boston Properties

·         Jon Hartnett, Commercial Real Estate Team Lead, EnerNOC

7:00 pm – 8:00 pm – Drinks reception and networking

 

Hope you can join us. Register today!  

 

2013 Review – Reprint from the NEREJ

By Grey Lee

It was a great year for the green building industry. The state of Massachusetts was recognized as having the best energy efficiency, renewable energy policies, and incentives in the country by ACEEE (the American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy) with Boston recognized as “most energy efficient city” on account of the many programs that have been implemented lately to encourage and achieve significant energy savings. This includes the Greenovate Boston community-engagement brand, the Renew Boston program, and the building energy reporting & disclosure ordinance. As these policies move through the market, they will enhance asset values and improve the end-user experience, attracting better businesses to our region.
 
124 buildings were LEED-certified in Massachusetts this year, capping off with a total of 829 overall. In the past two months, we've seen 15 more projects attain LEED — including 150 Second St. in Cambridge, which earned LEED CS Platinum with the help of Chapter sponsor The Green Engineer. We've seen 117 firms renew or newly join the USGBC as national member firms, including RDK Engineers and Paul Lukez Architects.  The green building movement continues: the Chapter was proud to support Boston Properties' LEED-Platinum targeted Boston Garden Project at a recent Boston Redevelopment Authority hearing.
 
Thank you to our many sponsors and to our many volunteers!  We will be hosting our annual Volunteer Recognition event during our Annual Meeting at EnerNOC on January 29th in Boston.  Also we have lined up a smorgasbord of green building gurus to bring a variety of quick presentations to us that they delivered at Greenbuild in Philadelphia on November. You can find more details on our website's event calendar: www.usgbcma.org/events
 
There are many ways to stay abreast of the burgeoning green building industry through the USGBC. Take a look at our YouTube Channel (USGBC MA) to find a series of short videos describing exemplary projects in Massachusetts such as Grousbeck Hall at the Perkins School and the North Shore Community College – the State's first “Net Zero” academic facility. You can follow us on Facebook & Twitter. Are you keeping up with the discussions on Linkedin? We have a lot going on with our advocacy work and our events!
 
Thank you again for your work to make our region a better place for all by creating more green buildings.
 
Grey Lee, MSc, LEED AP, is the executive director of the USGBC Mass. Chapter, Boston and is a monthly contributing author for the New England Real Estate Journal's Green Building section.
 

Networking with EnerNOC's Energy Network

By Grey Lee

What is going on with Building Energy Reporting & Disclosure in the City of Boston? What is the point of publicizing energy performance of buildings?

Last night, the Chapter partnered up with energy management leader EnerNOC to gather the community and talk about power. Gregg Dixon of EnerNOC and Grey Lee of USGBC MA both spoke briefly about their missions – to improve building energy performance on one hand and on the other: “More Green Buildings!”
 

Brian Swett, Boston Chief of Energy and Environment, came to present on the BERDO – the energy disclosure law that takes effect this coming year in Boston. The City is taking comments on the draft regulations right now. This ordinance will help the city achieve its climate mitigation obligations through carbon pollution reductions. Buildings account for 70% of Boston's GHG emissions. As usual, it was a very useful presentation and it was great to hear him easily answer the many questions from the very informed crowd. Lots of curveballs!

What if an owner just doesn't want to cooperate? There will be fines, but not major enough to sting. The important mechanism is that non-compliant properties will be listed publicly and the “shaming” factor will probably motivate people more than the potential fines. One note is that just having an old building might not be a reason to be afraid of the ordinance – New York's ordinance has resulted in data showing that one of the more energy efficient building types are those built in the 1920's and 30's, prior to mechanical systems. Designers availed themselves of passive heating and cooling techniques much more than in ensuing decades, when mechanicals were available and energy was relatively cheap.

With the ordinance, we'll have a lot of data to work with. As EnerNOC mentioned, data is a great tool to find solutions to complex problems: “We love data!”
 

Here are some facts about the ordinance:
  • All large and medium buildings or groups of buildings would be required to report annual energy use, ENERGY STAR rating (if applicable), water use, and greenhouse gas emissions through ENERGY STAR Portfolio Manager or an equivalent mechanism.
  • The requirement would be phased in over 5 years and would ultimately apply to non-residential buildings 35,000 square feet or greater and residential buildings with 35 or more units.
  • Buildings with ENERGY STAR ratings below the 75th percentile and not meeting other exemption criteria (to be developed by the city, i.e. high performing buildings that do not qualify for any ENERGY STAR rating or that show continuous improvement) would be required to conduct energy audits or other evaluations every 5 years to identify opportunities for energy efficiency investment. Building owners would not be required to act on the audit.
You can read more about BERDO at the USGBC MA Chapter Advocacy page on our website, including a link to Brian's presentation from last night.

 

Thank you Brian and thank you to EnerNOC for hosting the program! About 75 people came out to learn and network. The city looks forward to people supporting the roll out of the ordinance and helping to provide feedback on the regulatory language as they encounter novelties of the built environment that need to be responded to such as rare building types, structures that are hard to define, and energy systems that are more complex than usual.

You can chime in: The Air Pollution Control Commission will hear public comment on the proposed regulations on November 12th at 9:00 AM in Boston City Hall, Room 900; written comments are also being accepted through November 15.
 

 
Please consider joining the Chapter as a Member – our community increases our power to transform the built environment toward higher performance. Thank you for participating in our work!
 
Thank you to Lisa Bolwin and colleagues at EnerNOC for organizing and staffing the program. Thank you to Carolyn Day of the USGBC for organizing the series of Networking Nights for the Chapter.
 
See you next time!