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The New Norris House continues a tradition of simple, affordable design but with less impact on local resources.
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A cramped cottage is repurposed into a Mediterranean-style sustainable showpiece.
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USA Today renews its examination of green building with a focus on schools and claims that there is little link between environmentally friendly buildings and learning or energy use. USGBC fires back.
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Industry groups foresee problems with the proposed changes to LEED. We look at some of the concerns with LEED v4.
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The USGBC and the Land Use Law Center at Pace Law School introduce two resources to help local governments leverage LEED for Neighborhood Development as a tool for sustainable development.
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Turner Construction survey finds fewer companies are likely to seek LEED certification.
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Materials & Resources chair Malin discusses how transparency will permeate the world of building products, giving us nutrition-label-like sustainability data on everything we use.
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With 18,710 certified projects and counting, green verifier Steve Saunders is helping to drive his state’s green building movement.
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Regenerative Design chair Bob Berkebile looks at how new directions in design are taking their cues from the past and leading us toward nurturing buildings, homes, and communities connected with nature.
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In round four of the back and forth between USA Today and the USGBC over the on-going series on the green-building organization and LEED, USGBC vice president of LEED technical development Brendan Owens weighs in.