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City Green Building
What Is Green Building?

It's a concept with quite the buzz. Everyone is talking about it, from Wired magazine, to Elle, to Vanity Fair.  It's a topic so popular, that a Google search yields over 8 million hits.

It's how YOU can make a difference in the future of your family, your city, your planet. And it's a great way to think globally and act locally. 

It Started with Sustainable Development
In 1987 the United Nation's World Commission on Environment and Development, known as the Brundtland Commission, met to create a vision called "Our Common Future" that was based upon sustainability. From this effort, the definition of sustainable development emerged as:

"meeting the needs of the present
without compromising the ability of future generations
to meet their own needs."

Sustainable development measures success in terms of economic, environmental, and social benefits. The building industry expanded on this concept, and applied it to "the built environment," creating the term sustainable building. The term sustainable building is used interchangeably with green building. Its purpose is to reduce the adverse human impacts on the natural environment, while improving our quality of life and economic well-being.

The Impact of the Building Industry
Buildings and development affect water quality, air quality, and ecosystems, impacting human healthy and our quality of life. In addition to environmental impacts, buildings have a large economic footprint. Buildings represent more than 50 percent of the nation's wealth, and the U.S. construction market comprises 13% of U.S. GDP, and building-related fields employ 10 million people (2003 U.S. DOE Buildings Energy Databook). The U.S. construction market is also responsible for:

  • 39% of total energy use
  • 39% of municipal solid waste
  • 35% of greenhouse gas emissions
  • 40% of all raw materials, including
  • 25% of timber harvests
  • 12% of potable water withdrawal

To remain competitive and continue to expand and produce profits in the future, building industry professionals are learning to address the environmental, social and economic consequences of their industry. Through careful planning, we can substantially reduce the adverse impacts of the built environment. Some strategies can actually improve degraded environments and increase the comfort and productivity of building occupants. Sustainable building is an integrated approach that promotes environmental quality, economic vitality, and social benefit through the design, construction and operation of the built environment.

Green Building Today
Green building applies principles of resource and energy efficiency, healthy buildings and materials, and ecologically and socially sensitive land-use to achieve "an aesthetic sensitivity that inspires, affirms, and ennobles." (International Union of Architects "Declaration of Interdependence for a Sustainable Future)

Green building requires an integrated, multi-disciplinary design process and a "whole-building" systems approach that considers the building's entire life-cycle (from planning, design, and construction to operation and maintenance, renovation, and demolition or building reuse). Together, these provide the means to create solutions that optimize building cost and performance.

Last Updated: June 7, 2006
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Seattle LEED Projects

Certified as of 11.09

84 Commercial &
Multi-family  
Including 16 City-Owned

53 LEED for Homes

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CITY Green Building Website. Pictured Project: Birch Tree Cottages, GreenLeaf Construction. Photo by Jed Eli
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