The U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC) has released the LEED
regional credits as part of LEED 2009, the new version of the LEED
Green Building Rating System. These LEED credits encourage that
specific regional environmental priorities be addressed when
it
comes to the design, construction and operations of buildings in
different geographic locations.
"Because environmental priorities differ among various regions of
the country—the challenges in the southeast differ from those in
the northwest, for example—regionally specific credits give LEED a
way to directly respond to diverse, regionally grounded issues,"
says Brendan Owens, vice president of technical development, USGBC.
"The inclusion of these regional LEED credits is the Council's
first step toward addressing regional environmental issues."
With the help of USGBC's regional councils, chapters and
affiliates, credits addressing six specific environmental issues
within a region were identified from among the existing LEED
credits. In LEED 2009, LEED projects will be able to earn "bonus
points" for implementing green building strategies that address the
important environmental issues facing their region. A project can
be awarded as many as four extra points, with one point each for
achieving up to four of the six priority credits.
LEED 2009 is one of the three major components that make up LEED
Version 3, the next version of the LEED green building
certification program, which launched April 27, 2009. The changes
to the LEED rating system reflect the rapid advancements in
building science and technology and provides incentives for
strategies that have greater positive impacts on energy efficiency
and CO2 emissions reductions, among other priorities.
The other components of LEED v3 include a faster, smarter and
easier to use LEED Online, the tool for managing the LEED
registration and certification process; and a new building
certification model administered by the Green Building
Certification Institute through a network of internationally
recognized independent ISO-accredited certification bodies. To
learn more about LEED v3 and to download a region-by-region list of
priority credits, visit
www.usgbc.org/leed2009.
ChetanLEED 2009 to Include LEED Credits for Regional Environmental Priorities
April 28, 2009
The U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC) has released the LEED regional credits as part of LEED 2009, the new version of the LEED Green Building Rating System. These LEED credits encourage that specific regional environmental priorities be addressed when it
comes to the design, construction and operations of buildings in different geographic locations.
"Because environmental priorities differ among various regions of the country—the challenges in the southeast differ from those in the northwest, for example—regionally specific credits give LEED a way to directly respond to diverse, regionally grounded issues," says Brendan Owens, vice president of technical development, USGBC. "The inclusion of these regional LEED credits is the Council's first step toward addressing regional environmental issues."
With the help of USGBC's regional councils, chapters and affiliates, credits addressing six specific environmental issues within a region were identified from among the existing LEED credits. In LEED 2009, LEED projects will be able to earn "bonus points" for implementing green building strategies that address the important environmental issues facing their region. A project can be awarded as many as four extra points, with one point each for achieving up to four of the six priority credits.
LEED 2009 is one of the three major components that make up LEED Version 3, the next version of the LEED green building certification program, which launched April 27, 2009. The changes to the LEED rating system reflect the rapid advancements in building science and technology and provides incentives for strategies that have greater positive impacts on energy efficiency and CO2 emissions reductions, among other priorities.
The other components of LEED v3 include a faster, smarter and easier to use LEED Online, the tool for managing the LEED registration and certification process; and a new building certification model administered by the Green Building Certification Institute through a network of internationally recognized independent ISO-accredited certification bodies. To learn more about LEED v3 and to download a region-by-region list of priority credits, visit
www.usgbc.org/leed2009.