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On Monday, April 21, members of the National Trust for Historic
Preservation (NTHP) Sustainable Preservation Coalition received an
update from National Trust staff on several of the initiatives on
the coalition, including cooperative efforts with the US Green
Building Council (USGBC) to encourage greater understanding of the
benefits of preservation and rehabilitation of the existing
building stock in particular historic buildings - as a green
building practice, and to develop methods and metrics to reflect
these values in LEED rating systems.
Barbara Campagna (NTHP) reported that the current version of LEED
2.2 is currently in the process of revision, and changes are being
drafted that will incorporate better metrics for historic and
existing buildings. The revised version LEED 3.0 is scheduled to be
released for public comment May 1, 2008, and will be presented for
adoption at GreenBuild this November in Boston. Stay tuned; the HRC
will attempt to distribute the LEED 3.0 for member comments as soon
as it becomes available. Please click here to view Barabara Campagnas
blog.
Also during the meeting, National Trust Sustainable Preservation
Initiative staff members Emily Wadhams and Rhonda Sincavage, as
well as research associate Patrice Frey, presented the draft research agenda developed by the
Coalition.
The National Trust for Historic Preservation is committed to
developing the research needed to make clear the environmental
benefits of preservation. This research plan outlines the
Trusts proposed research activities to support building
reuse, community reinvestment, and greening the existing building
stock. The research agenda focuses on the following key areas:
- Building Re-use: Lifecycle Cost Analysis and Building
Archetypes Analysis
- Greening Building Stock: Case Studies and Historic Windows
Assessment
- Reinvesting in Older and Historic Communities: U Penn Study and
Economic Assessments of Teardowns and Building Abandonment
Outcomes from the National Trust Sustainability Initiative and
Coalition efforts are extremely positive and show a willingness by
all parties to make substantial, rapid progress towards shared
goals. USGBC has acknowledged there are important aspects currently
missing from the LEED rating systems, including historic
preservation, smart growth, and cultural values. And USGBC is
working with Coalition member assistance to develop and incorporate
preservation criteria and metrics into the next version of
LEED.
The Coalitions immediate goal is to strengthen the
integration of historic preservation into the USGBC LEED green
building rating systems. However, the purpose of the Coalition is
to promote historic preservation as an inherently sustainable
building practice, and Coalition members are working toward several
joint goals, including research, education and outreach. The
evolution of the preservation movement has grown to encompass all
tenets of sustainability: environment, equity, and economics.
Historic preservation is the most sustainable building
practice.
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