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What is a green building? It might be better to ask what it is not. All
of us, contractors and workers alike, have been constructing non-green
buildings for over a century. Until recently that meant installing,
maintaining and repairing systems whose only object was to meet a
specification and satisfy a customer. In other words, to bring water,
heat, and take away waste in the most efficient, safe, and economical
manner. Doing this was, and remains, our business. It is why we exist.
The green building concept has largely
developed over the past decade. Fundamentally it means the practice of
increasing the efficiency of buildings and their use of energy, water
and materials, while reducing impacts on the environment. This is done
through a conscious effort over the entire building cycle, from design
through construction, operation, maintenance and even demolition or
removal.
The difference between these two approaches
and their methods is actually quite small. For professionals in the
field it is merely another series of options—familiar choices about
materials, installation and tools. On the other hand, because of the
increasing popularity of green building, and the rising number of
projects whose specifications include green building provisions,
thinking, bidding and working green is becoming profitable; in the
future it is likely to become the only reliably profitable mode of
operation in a large part of the construction industry. Today green
building practices are encouraged and sometimes required: in the future
they will increasingly become mandated as part of industry codes and
specifications.
Of course, every segment of our industry is
already acquainted with conservation of energy and material; after all,
that’s what plumbing, piping, heating and cooling are all about.
Building green is simply another expression of the same effort and work.
New Practices for New Goals
Green building standards are rapidly being
adopted in both the public and private sectors, for work as varied as a
simple faucet replacement to the design and construction of major
facilities. Most contractors are familiar with these standards as
elements within a larger set of specifications; for instance, as a
local requirement for the use of graywater in the irrigation system of
a public park. It is becoming increasingly common for customers and
awarding agencies to establish or to refer to standards which are
comprehensive in scale—ranging from particular origins and composition
of construction materials to the type and use of tools and methods of
installation, all the way through to the elements of the final punch
list, and occasionally beyond. One significant difference is that the
green building is perceived as a set of ongoing functions rather than a
temporary challenge of construction to be accomplished and left for
another job. These functions often begin before the traditional scope
of construction work and end beyond it, too.
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