Transcript Environmental Direction in the Wood Door Industry
Environmental Certification in the Wood Door Industry Version 2.2
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What we will cover Today
Why
is there an environmental movement?
What
are the benefits?
What’s
Driving the Movement
Who’s
Driving the Movement USGBC and LEED How LEED Works 4/30/2020 Marshfield DoorSystems, Inc 2
Why?
Environmental Impact of Buildings
65.2% of total U.S. electricity consumption1 1 > 36% of total U.S. primary energy use 2 30% of total U.S. greenhouse gas emissions 3 136 million tons of construction and demolition waste in the U.S. (approx. 2.8 lbs/person/day) 4 12% of potable water in the U.S. 5 40% (3 billion tons annually) of raw materials use globally 6 4/30/2020 * Commercial and residential Marshfield DoorSystems, Inc 3
Why
Is there a need for a Certification Movement?
Facilitate positive results for the environment, occupant health and financial return Define “green” by providing a standard for measurement.
Prevent “Greenwashing” (false or exaggerated claims) Promote whole-building, integrated processes Transform the market place!
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What
are the Benefits of Green Buildings
Environmental benefits
Reduce the impacts of natural resource consumption
Economic benefits
Improve the bottom line
Increase building valuation and ROI Decreases vacancy and improves retention • Marketing advantages Reduce liability • Improve risk management 4/30/2020 Marshfield DoorSystems, Inc 5
What
are the Benefits of Green Buildings
Economic benefits • State Tax Incentives!
• Local Tax Credits!
• Simplification of Permit Process!
• Greater Productivity!
• Operational Cost Savings!
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What is driving the Green Movement?
Economic benef its Competitive first costs Integrated design allows high benefit at low cost by achieving synergy's between disciplines and between technologies Reduce operating costs Lower utility costs significantly Optimize life-cycle economic performance 4/30/2020 Marshfield DoorSystems, Inc 7
What is driving the Green Movement?
Health and safety benefits
Enhance occupant comfort and health
Community benefits
Minimize strain on local infrastructures and improve quality of life
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It is a GREEN ($) Movement
It Costs to be certified It Costs to be inspected Organization memberships are expensive Product Development is expensive Costs are always passed on to consumer 4/30/2020 Marshfield DoorSystems, Inc 9
Who’s
Driving the Movement US Green Building Council
Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design
LEED
A Program of the US Green Building Council (www.usgbc.org) 4/30/2020 Marshfield DoorSystems, Inc 10
Who’s
Driving the Movement?
The USGBC!!…Who is the USGBC?
A national nonprofit organization A diverse membership of organizations Consensus-driven Committee-based product development Developer and administrator of the LEED
®
Green Building Rating System
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Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) LEED Was created to:
Define standards of “High Performance or “green buildings” Promote whole building design practices Recognize environmental leadership Stimulate green competition Raise awareness of high performance building benefits 4/30/2020 Marshfield DoorSystems, Inc 12
Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) LEED is:
Voluntary Not dictated by code May be required by Federal, State or local jurisdictions Self-assessing Points-based Concerned with entire construction process 4/30/2020 Marshfield DoorSystems, Inc 13
LEED 4/30/2020 Waste Management Forest Management “Other” issues Air Quality Marshfield DoorSystems, Inc 14
Who’s
Driving the Movement?
“Standard Setters” The American Forest Foundation’s Tree Forest System (AFF) (www.affoundation.org) Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) (www.fscus.org) American Forest and Paper Association’s Sustainable Forestry Initiative (SFI) (www.afandpa.org) GreenGuard (indoor air quality) 4/30/2020 Marshfield DoorSystems, Inc 15
Who’s
Driving the Movement
“Performance Assessors” Smartwood (www.smartwood.org) FSC COC Scientific Certification Systems Recycled Content 4/30/2020 Marshfield DoorSystems, Inc 16
LEED in Use
Federal Government
General Services Admin US Air Force US Army Corps of Engineers Dept. of State Dept. of Energy Env. Protection Agency US Navy USPS
State Government
California Connecticut Maine Maryland Massachusetts New Jersey New York Oregon Pennsylvania Marshfield DoorSystems, Inc 4/30/2020 17
LEED in Use
LEED Project Owners: NOAA Pentagon Ford Motor Co Honda Toyota Hines IBM Herman Miller Harvard University Boeing Applied Biosystems Manuallife Financial Goldman Sachs Williams-Sonoma National Weather Service USPS National Park Service FAA FDA NRDC 4/30/2020 LEED Project Owners: Colorado College Connecticut College Emory University Georgia Tech Harvard Lewis and Clark MIT Montana State University Oberlin College Seattle University Tulane University University of Cincinnati University of California System UNC - Asheville Pitt University of Florida Marshfield DoorSystems, Inc 18
Global Interest in LEED
® Australia Canada* * China* France Hong Kong India * * 4/30/2020 Japan* Spain* Mexico* Italy* Guam* Côte d'Ivoire* Guatemala* Marshfield DoorSystems, Inc
*
Certified Projects *Registered Projects 19
LEED
March 2002 September 2003
LEED Growth
20 Certified, 340 Registered 27 Certified, 452 Registered November 2004 151 Certified, 1,984 Registered October 2005 289 Certified, 2069 Registered June 2006 360 Certified, 3775 Registered 4/30/2020 Marshfield DoorSystems, Inc 20
LEED-NC
®
Market Transformation
289 Certified Projects 2,069 Registered Projects 235 M gsf As of 10.19.05
4/30/2020 50 States 13 Countries Marshfield DoorSystems, Inc All statistics exclude pilot projects 21
LEED-NC
®
Market Transformation
Registered Projects by State - Top 10 45,000,000 40,000,000 35,000,000 30,000,000 25,000,000 20,000,000 15,000,000 10,000,000 5,000,000 0 As of 10.19.05
4/30/2020 358 CA 125 125 122 103 94 86 83 78 67 NY WA PA OR TX MI IL
State and Number of Projects
Marshfield DoorSystems, Inc MA AZ All statistics exclude pilot projects 22
LEED-NC
®
Market Transformation
Registered Projects by Owner Type OTHER 8% FEDERAL GOVERNMENT 8% INDIVIDUAL 2% PROFIT CORPORATION 28% STATE GOVERNMENT 12% As of 10.19.05
4/30/2020 NONPROFIT CORPORATION 20% Marshfield DoorSystems, Inc LOCAL GOVERNMENT 22% All statistics exclude pilot projects 23
4/30/2020
Genzyme Building, Cambridge, Massachusetts Behnisch, Behnisch, & Partner, Stuttgart, Germany LEED Platinum Certification Photo Credit: Anton Grassl
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LEED ® v2 Certified 2001 Building Statistics
Completion Date: Cost: Size: Footprint: Construction Type: Use Group: Lot Size: Annual Energy Use: Occupancy:
November 2001 $60 Million (construction contract only) 253,000 gross square feet 74,000 square feet Commercial/Industrial Office and Design Center 11.5 acres 24,356,010 kBtu/h 700
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Premier Automotive Group North American Headquarters Ford Motor Company Irvine, California Project Highlights: Sustainable Sites
•Alternative Transportation: Three bus routes are located within ¼ mile; bicycle racks and showers provided; 30 electric vehicle recharging stations provided.
Water Efficiency
•Innovative Wastewater Technologies: All toilets use reclaimed water, accounting for more than 50% of total sewage conveyance.
Energy and Atmosphere
•Optimize Energy Performance: Exceeds ASHRAE 90.1-1999 by 40% using a high efficiency glazing system, high efficiency lighting with T5 lamps, an underfloor air distribution system in office tower, increased chiller efficiency and a variable speed drive on one chiller.
Materials and Resources
•Construction Waste Management: 57% of all construction waste was recycled including concrete, asphalt, paper, metal and cardboard.
Indoor Environmental Quality
•Construction IAQ Management Plan: All ducts and permeable materials were protected against contamination during construction; all construction filtration media was replaced before occupancy.
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New York State Department of Environmental Conservation Office Complex at 625 Broadway Avenue Albany, New York Project Highlights: Sustainable Sites
• Urban Redevelopment: Urban infill site was previously a gravel parking lot.
• Alternative Transportation: Located 80 yards from 4 bus lines; bicycle racks and showers; 15 electric vehicle charging stations; priority carpool parking.
LEED ® Owner: Building Statistics
Completion Date: Size: Footprint: Construction Type: Use Group: Lot Size: Annual Energy Use: Occupancy: 4/30/2020
v2 Silver 2002 Picotte Companies Energy and Atmosphere
• Optimize Energy Performance: Exceeds ASHRAE/IESNA 90.1 1999 by 23.7%.
• Additional Commissioning: Verified that the building is designed, constructed and calibrated to operate as intended.
September 2002 471,000 gross square feet 45,600 square feet Commercial Office 2.18 acres 22,232,209 kBtu/year 1700 Staff
Materials and Resources
• Construction Waste Management: 51% of construction waste was recycled.
Indoor Environmental Quality
• CO 2 Monitoring: CO 2 monitoring system has 83 sensors integrated with the building’s building management system.
• Low-Emitting Materials: All adhesives, sealants, paints, coatings, carpeting, composite wood emit low or no volatile organic compounds.
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How LEED Works
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How LEED Works
Credit criteria grouped into 6 major categories: I) Sustainable Sites II) Water efficiency III) Energy and Atmosphere IV) Materials and Resources V) Indoor Environmental Quality VI) Innovation and Design Process 14 5 17 13 15 5 6 Categories divided into 32 credits, with 69 total available points 4/30/2020 Marshfield DoorSystems, Inc 29
How LEED Works
Whole-building approach encourages and guides a collaborative, integrated design and construction process 4 Certification Levels depending upon the number of points accumulated.
Certified 26-32 points Silver Gold Platinum 33-38 points 39-51 points 52+ points 4/30/2020 Marshfield DoorSystems, Inc 30
How LEED Works
We’ll 6 points in 5 Credit areas within 2 Categories.
MATERIALS AND RESOURCES
Recycled content 1 point for 10% Additional point for 20% Regional Materials 1 point for 10% Regional Extraction, Processed and Manufacture within 500 miles 1 additional point for 20% Rapidly-renewable Materials 1 point for use of rapidly-renewable (typically harvested within 10 cycle or shorter. 2.5% of building materials cost Certified Wood 1 point for FSC-certified wood. 50% of wood based materials used certified by FSC.
INDOOR ENV. QUALITY
Low Emitting Materials 1 point for low-VOC adhesives 1 point for no added UF in composite wood or agrifiber products used on the interior of the building. 4/30/2020 Marshfield DoorSystems, Inc 31
How LEED Works
IV) Materials and Resources Category
1) Building Reuse 2) Construction Waste Management 3) Resource Reuse
4) Recycled Content 5) Local/regional Materials 6) Rapidly-renewable Materials 7) Certified Wood
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How LEED Works
Materials and Resources Category 4.0 - Recycled Content
Two possible points: Point 4.1 Calculate the value of Post-consumer + 1/2 Pre-Consumer = 10% total value of materials in the project Point 4.2 Calculate the value of Post-consumer + 1/2 Pre-Consumer = 20% total value of materials in the project 4/30/2020 Marshfield DoorSystems, Inc 33
How LEED Works
Value based on % of recycled materials used to manufacture the product Post consumer materials claim $1 for $1 spent $10,000 X 50% (%of recycled material) = $5,000 = $5,000 toward cost Pre-Consumer materials claim $.50 for $1 spent $10,000 X 50% (Certified % of Pre-Consumer Material) = $5,000 X .5 = $2,500 toward cost 4/30/2020 Marshfield DoorSystems, Inc 34
How LEED Works
Recycled Content Credit - Example Unfinished slab door 1,000 doors x $75/door x (50% x 1/2) = $18,750 towards the points Finished, machined door 1,000 doors x $100/door x (50% x 1/2) = $25,000 toward the points Glazed, finished, machined door 1,000 doors x $125/door x (50% x 1/2) = $31,250 towards the points 4/30/2020 Marshfield DoorSystems, Inc 35
How LEED Works
Materials and Resources Category 5.0 Local/Regional Materials Extracted, Processed & Manufactured within 500 miles
Two possible Points: Point 5.1 Use a minimum of 10% of building materials and products that are extracted, processed and manufactured* within a radius of 500 miles.
Point 5.2 - A minimum of 20% Extracted, Processed and Manufactured within a radius of 500 miles.
* Manufacturing refers to the final assembly of components into the building product that is furnished and installed by the tradesmen. For example, if the hardware comes from Dallas, Texas, the lumber from Vancouver, British Columbia, and the joist is assembled in Kent, Washington; then the location of the final assembly is Kent, Washington.
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How LEED Works
Materials and Resources Category 6.0 Rapidly Renewable Materials
Use rapidly renewable building materials and products (made from plants that are typically harvested within a ten-year cycle or shorter).
Currently agrifiber doors are the only product in the door industry that meets this criteria, but MDS has chosen not to include agrifiber in its environmental product offering Because agrifiber is new to the industry, the long term performance has yet to be demonstrated 4/30/2020 Marshfield DoorSystems, Inc 37
How LEED Works
Materials and Resources Category 7.0 Certified Wood
One possible point: Point 7 - Use a minimum of 50% of wood based materials and products, certified in accordance with the Forest Stewardship Council’s Principles and Criteria, for wood building components including, but not limited to: structural framing and general dimensional framing, flooring, sub-flooring, wood doors and finished. Include only materials permanently installed in the project. Furniture may be included, providing it is included consistently in MR Credits 3-7.
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How LEED Works
V) Indoor Environmental Quality
1) Carbon Dioxide monitoring 2) Increase ventilation effectiveness 3) Construction IAQ Management Plan
4) Low-Emitting Materials
5) Indoor Chemical & Pollutant Source Control 6) Controllability of Systems 7) Themal Comfort 8) Daylight and Views 4/30/2020 Marshfield DoorSystems, Inc 39
How LEED Works
Indoor Environmental Quality 4.0 Low-Emitting Materials
Four possible points: Point 4.1 Low-VOC adhesives
(South Coast Air Quality Management District)
Point 4.2 Low-VOC Paints/Coatings
(Green Seal standards. Applies to paints and coatings used on the interior of the building)
Point 4.3 Low-emitting Carpet
(Carpet and Rug Institute Green Label program)
Point 4.4 No added UF in composite wood, particleboard, agrifiber, MDF, plywood, wheatboard, strawboard, panel substrates and door cores.
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How LEED Works For Wood Doors
Indoor Environmental Quality Category 4.1 Low Emitting Adhesive and Sealants Version 2.2 limits this point to adhesives and sealants that are FIELD APPLIED Marshfield products are neutral, meaning we neither add to nor decrease the ability to qualify for this point All Marshfield DoorSystems products utilize adhesives and sealants that meet low emitting requirements.
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How LEED Works For Wood Doors
Indoor Environmental Quality Category 4.2 Low Emitting Paints/Coatings Version 2.2 limits this point to paints and coatings that are FIELD APPLIED All Marshfield DoorSystems products utilize paints and coatings that meet the low emitting requirement.
By utilizing factory finished doors, no disqualifying material can be used for door finishes (plus you add value)
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How LEED Works For Wood Doors
Indoor Environmental Quality Category 4.4 No added Urea Formaldehyde This is an all or nothing credit Composite wood and agrifiber products used on the interior of the building shall contain no added urea-formaldehyde resins or adhesives.
Marshfield DoorSystems meets the no added UF requirement with all “UF” models See our LEED credit matrix for more information 4/30/2020 Marshfield DoorSystems, Inc 43
MDS Products
LEED-NC v2.2 Credit Matrix
CORE TYPE FSC-Certified Particleboard FSC-Certified FSC-Certified UF-Free Stave Core Particleboard Stave Core
EPC ESC EPCUF ESCUF
UF-Free Composite Mineral Core Stile & Rail Lumber
ECLUF EFMUF WSR MDS Nomenclature
Materials and Resources
4.1
10% Recycled Content (1) 4.2
20% Recycled Content (1) 5.1
10% Extracted, Processed & Manufactured Regionally (2) 5.2
20% Extracted, Processed & Manufactured Regionally (2) 6.0
Rapidly Renewable Materials (3) 7.0
Certified Wood (6 & 7) YES YES YES YES NO YES NO NO YES YES NO YES YES YES YES YES NO YES
Indoor Environmental Quality
4.1
Low-VOC Adhesives & Sealants (4) 4.2
Low-VOC Paints & Coatings (5) 4.4
No Added Urea-Formaldehyde (7) YES YES NO YES YES NO YES YES YES
Footnotes:
(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) Marshfield doors are certified by Scientific Certification Systems (SCS) and average 50% pre-consumer recycled wood fiber Location of project site in relation to extracting, processing and manufacturing determines eligibility (must be within 500 miles) Defined as resources that are planted and/or harvested in a 10-year cycle (examples: wheat, straw, etc) Meets LEED standards for low VOC content. Point applies to field applied adhesives and sealants. 4/30/2020 Marshfield DoorSystems, Inc Stile & Rail application is manufactured with FSC certified MDF in limited profiles. Contact Marshfield DoorSystems for specific information.
Stile & Rail application is available either FSC Certified or No-Added UF (not both). NO NO YES YES NO YES YES YES YES NO NO YES YES NO NO YES YES YES NO NO YES YES NO NO YES YES YES 44 NO NO NO NO NO YES YES YES YES
LEED Process Recap
Marshfield doors qualify as
part
to meet LEED credits!
of your effort You Must: Accumulate Points and total Your Points 2 Determine certification level based on points Certified 26-32 Gold 39-51 Silver 33-38 Platinum 52+ Document your status and submit to USGBC for review and certification!
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Responsibilities
The Project Team must decide IN ADVANCE which of the 69 possible points will be pursued Specifications are then written with the chosen points in mind Correct specifications eliminate questions, confusion and frustration!
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Responsibilities
Architect/Spec writer Realistic expectations and requests Clearly communicated Non-contradictory approach Ask questions!
Distributors/Contractors Ask questions!
Accumulate documentation, as needed 4/30/2020 Supply product as specified Marshfield DoorSystems, Inc 47
LEED Programs
LEED-NC: New Commercial Construction and Major Renovation Projects LEED-EB: Existing Building Projects LEED-CI: Commercial Interior Projects LEED-CS: Core and Shell Projects LEED-H: Homes LEED-ND: Neighborhood Development 4/30/2020 Marshfield DoorSystems, Inc 48
LEED
Myths, Misunderstandings, and Miscommunications LEED means FSC!
LEED requires formaldehyde free!
Doors get you the point!
FSC-certified Veneer is all I need!
You can decide to get LEED-certified partway through the project!
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LEED
Voluntary program designed by the USGBC Marshfield Door Systems does not give points - no one can Marshfield Door Systems does provide doors that assist in satisfying point criteria Be aware of conflicting information Plan ahead 4/30/2020 Marshfield DoorSystems, Inc 50
Other LEED Systems
Thank You
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