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RECORD’s sister publication, GreenSource, publishes in-depth, data-rich reports on sustainable design and green-building performance. And the new Green Building Project Search lets you easily search our archive of case studies using many criteria, including LEED score and products used in the project.
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Discreet Heat: In a house museum in north Georgia, an orthodox approach to historic interpretation minimizes heating and cooling load. Photo © Jonathan Hillyer / Atlanta |
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Suck It Up: A Texas pool house's design is informed by runoff prevention. Photo © Whit Preston |
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Our video library includes a Green channel where we tour important sustainable projects, explore ecologically attuned features, and speak with the people behind noteworthy green design solutions. We have also partnered with the National Building Museum to bring you their Great Green Places series. Image courtesy Sebastian Howard |
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True Green Photo courtesy Clark Richert |
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Postoccupancy evaluations offer a systematic process for assessing completed projects, pointing the way to better-performing buildings. Photo © Peter Aaron/Esto |
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The collaboration between two Australian firms on Melbourne's new Council House 2 shows off the design possibilities for building-integrated HVAC. Photo © Russell Fortmeyer |
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The artist Mary Miss and architects Marlon Blackwell, Kierantimberlake Associates, and Lake/Flato radically reinterpret site construction in three new projects. |
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Efforts to make life-cycle assessment (LCA) an integral part of sustainable design practices are beginning to bear fruit. Since late 2004, the U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC) has been working to incorporate the methodology into its widely used building-rating system, LEED, and has committed to producing a detailed plan for integration by November 2007. |
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On the greenhouse gas trail, one engineer aims beyond "carbon neutral" |
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Following carbon footprints leads architects and consultants to their own doorsteps |
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With cities worldwide facing daunting environmental challenges on a global scale, a multidisciplinary team at Arup seeks to create a model for how cities can develop carbon neutrally. Read on. Photo © Sascha Kletzsch |
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With energy-modeling programs and early input, mechanical engineers are increasingly involved in design decisions that are shaping the look of a new architecture. Pictured: United States Courthouse, Seattle; Photo © Frank Ooms |
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Recently Posted Reader Photos
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| 4/2006 | Robo Buildings: Pursuing the Interactive Envelope In Recent projects, smarter building skins automatically control daylighting, ventilation, and more to benefit occupants and enhance sustainable design quality. |
| 3/2006 | Can a New Kind of Heat Pump Change the World? An Electric-bill-burdened Engineer has developed what the HVAC industry has ignored: a heat pump that works when the temperature is below zero. Will consumers beat a path to his door? |
| 2/2006 | New Technologies Create New Challenges. With the current emphasis on technology and sustainability, architects and researchers rely on building process to manage the flood of products, materials, and options |
| 12/2005 | Architect co-founds company that will turn medical waste into energy |
| 9/2005 | Commercial Buildings Open Their Windows. New technologies are reintroducing energy-efficent operable windows into large, normally sealed buildings. |
| 7/2005 | The Pick of the Sustainable Crop. Lessons learned from AIA Committee on the Environment award winners. |
| 6/2005 | How is LEED faring after five years of use? The most successful rating system for green buildings is evolving. |
| 5/2005 | Born Again: A New Skin Offers a Fresh Start. A curtain-wall retrofit extends the life of a high-rise and makes it energy-efficient. |
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