New York City’s Local Law 97, an ambitious climate plan that includes fines for owners of large buildings that don’t significantly reduce carbon emissions, has spawned innovations to address the law’s provisions.
The law aims to cut emissions from New York’s largest buildings 40% by 2030 and 80% by 2050. In 2024, the city will begin fining owners of inefficient commercial and residential properties. Fines would rise significantly in 2030.
To avoid those penalties, a 20-year-old luxury Manhattan residential tower has installed scrubbers that capture exhaust from the building’s two natural gas boilers. The effort is part of a pilot project by startup CarbonQuest that will include five other locations.
A Brooklyn tower with 441 mixed-income residences and 30,000 sf of retail is taking another approach. It will be fully electrified, using power from community solar panels and batteries.
The new law could trigger a $20 billion market in energy retrofits in the city over the next decade. Much of that money will be spent on conventional efficiency upgrades such as adding LED light bulbs, triple-pane windows, and updating HVAC equipment including the addition of heat pumps.
Related Stories
Building Owners | Feb 4, 2021
The Weekly show, Feb 4, 2021: The rise of healthy buildings and human performance
This week on The Weekly show, BD+C editors speak with AEC industry leaders from Brookfield Properties, NBBJ, and UL about healthy buildings certification and improving human performance through research-based design.
Sustainability | Jan 19, 2021
Buildings as carbon banks
Leveraging design to reduce our carbon impact.
Sustainability | Dec 17, 2020
McDonald’s Disney-Flagship positions itself to be world’s first net-zero quick-service restaurant
Ross Barney Architects designed the project.
Sustainable Design and Construction | Nov 17, 2020
A digital catalog offers mass timber solutions for greener urban construction
Hybrid designs reconcile metropolitan growth and lower CO2 emissions.
Sustainability | Nov 11, 2020
Passive house design: A key to sustainable community building
Passive House is a high-performance building standard that emphasizes tightly insulated enclosures, heat recovery, and monitors airflow to reduce energy consumption.
Sustainability | Sep 30, 2020
U.S. Green Building Council, Green Business Certification Inc. expand resilience resources to support the green building industry
LEED and GBCI rating systems drive resilience-enhancing strategies to help businesses and governments mitigate climate risks.
Sustainability | Sep 29, 2020
Heatherwick Studio creates a new concept for San Francisco’s Piers 30-32
The new vision is dubbed The Cove.
Sustainability | Aug 13, 2020
The largest single sloped solar array in the country completes
The installation sits atop Pittsburgh’s Mill 19.
Sustainability | Aug 11, 2020
Sustainability is key for Denver Water’s modernized campus and distribution system
The utility is showcasing a new admin building and a water reuse plan that’s a first for the state.
Sponsored | Voice of the Brand | Jul 2, 2020
Solving the Building Envelope Challenge
Today, solutions for the building envelope need to meet exacting standards on two equally important fronts – long-term performance and enduring aesthetic appeal. In this article, CENTRIA demonstrates how its products meet the standard in two different scenarios – construction of a new hospital in Asheville, North Carolina, and the addition to a popular museum in Pittsburgh.