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Construction Company ArticlesThe Rise In Green Building Trends TodayBy
Vanessa A. Doctor The
green building trend that has taken hold across the US in the past few years,
and is surprisingly evolving toward a whole new level. Whereas before when there
were only a few green real estate developments, today this trend in sustainable
development has expanded to whole communities and neighborhoods as well. The
west coast city of Portland has been well known as an urban-design innovator,
particularly for its transit-oriented developments, and is noted to be among the
pioneers of green building and design. Single-Family Home Builders Are
Now Joining The TrendThe basic tenets behind green building- energy and
water-efficient buildings that have features that stress the natural over the
chemical, the recycled over the new and the renewable over the finite- have now
become firmly mainstream. According to environmental and real estate consultants,
big developers today are slow to move, but they still see a using eco-friendly
designs and materials green building. Even in the suburbs, which are home to large-scale
builders of single-family homes, there is a lot more consumer interest swelling.
In a McGraw-Hill Construction survey done in March of 2006, it forecasted that
green building would reach a "tipping point" in 2007 and that two-thirds of US
builders will be constructing greener homes. Why Home Builders See The
Need To Go GreenHome builders and real estate developers and are not simply
riding the green building trend purely out of a sense that it's the right thing
to do. The housing and development industry knows that they can't afford to be
left behind. By 2007, it is expected that at least 6% of the nation's non-residential
construction, which represents a $15 billion slice of the industry, will be green,
according to green-building experts, as six years ago it was less than 1%. More
real estate developers are finding that using green technologies and construction
materials adds no more than 1%-2% to total costs, which area easily recovered
through energy savings. Offering Incentives For Developers To Go GreenAt
present, the federal government, 15 states and 46 cities now require new public
buildings to fully comply with the U.S. Green Building Council's LEED standards
(Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design), that requires the use of non-toxic
building materials, among other things. Four states and 17 cities now offer
incentives for LEED-rated private buildings. The Green Building Council has certified
nearly 550 buildings across the country since 2002, and recent real estate developments
have adopted eco-friendly standards by creating greener multi-structure projects,
such as South Waterfront in Portland, Oregon. The Green Building Council is also
working on creating LEED standards for single-family homes as well. The
corporate world was the first to see the value of going green that are way beyond
energy savings. Businesses and companies now notice less absenteeism among workers,
less time lost to asthma, allergies and other illnesses aggravated by mold, stale
air and chemicals found in many conventional buildings. However, to large
corporations like Ford, Bank of America, Target, Toyota, Honda, Starbucks,Adobe
and others, going green also was about image-building as well as cleaning up the
environment and cutting costs. Many corporate giants know are aware that aside
from image-building, the products they make should also be green, along with their
manufacturing processes and factories as well. About the Authorhttp://realestatepr.org
- Real Estate PR Vanessa A. Doctor from Jump2Top
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