flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

New LEED Pilot ACP designed to help eliminate irresponsibly sourced materials

Wood

New LEED Pilot ACP designed to help eliminate irresponsibly sourced materials

Illegal wood is primary target to restrict illicit material in the supply chain.


By Peter Fabris, Contributing Editor | April 8, 2016
New LEED Pilot ACP designed to help eliminate irresponsibly sourced materials

Photo: Christopher Sessums/Creative Commons.

USGBC’s recent quarterly addenda to the LEED green building rating system includes a new pilot Alternative Compliance Path (ACP) credit that is designed to eliminate irresponsibly sourced materials.

One aim is to advance environmentally responsible forest management to help rid buildings of illegal wood by promoting wood that is verified to be legal. The pilot ACP builds on the robust infrastructure that has been built around responsible wood sourcing and chain of custody to test an approach to prerequisite requirements.

This approach to wood could serve as a model for other building materials, USGBC says. This pilot ACP is applicable to both LEED 2009 and LEED v4 systems. LEED has always rewarded leadership in materials specification, but this new approach focuses attentionon the significant need for more comprehensive and effective legality verification of building products, according to USGBC.

“We want LEED to be a significant driver for stopping illegal logging,” says Rick Fedrizzi, CEO andfounding chair, USGBC. “As we have begun looking at approaches to incentivize responsible sourcing of all materials that go into our buildings—such as concrete, steel, copper and other materials—we recognize the need to address both the top—rewarding the best—as well as the bottom by eliminating unacceptable practices.”

Related Stories

Wood | Mar 20, 2019

3XN to design North America’s tallest timber office building in Toronto

The office will rise in the emerging Bayside community.

Wood | Mar 5, 2019

Sweden’s tallest timber building is open for business

C.F. Møller Architects designed the building.

Wood | Feb 14, 2019

Gensler designs Texas’ first full mass timber building

The 8,500-sf structure will be located in Fredericksburg.

Wood | Oct 19, 2018

Design revealed for mass-timber residential tower in Milwaukee

The developer is confident that the city will approve construction, which is scheduled to start next year.

Wood | Oct 10, 2018

A recent seminar in New York City talks up the use of mass timber for taller buildings

The products’ future, though, could hinge on approval of proposed code changes.    

Wood | Aug 24, 2018

The largest dowel laminated timber project in North America begins construction in Des Moines

The building will feature a unique “shou sugi ban” charred wood exterior.

Wood | Jul 23, 2018

Mass timber high-rise project on hold in Portland, Ore.

Inflation, escalating construction costs, and fluctuations in tax credit market are to blame for the Framework project being put on hold.

Wood | Jul 2, 2018

Mass timber comes of age: Code consideration, evolving supply chain promise new options for tall wood buildings

Judging by the outcome of a recent International Code Council Action Hearing, it’s likely that we will be seeing more and taller mass timber buildings across the country very soon, writes Patricia Layton, PhD, Professor of Forestry, Clemson University.

Codes and Standards | Jun 19, 2018

Structural engineered wood products exempt from new EPA formaldehyde ruling

Exempt products include structural plywood, oriented strand board (OSB).

| May 30, 2018

Accelerate Live! talk: T3 mass timber office buildings

In this 15-minute talk at BD+C’s Accelerate Live! conference (May 10, 2018, Chicago), architect and mass timber design expert Steve Cavanaugh tells the story behind the nation’s newest—and largest—mass timber building: T3 in Minneapolis.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category




halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021