www.SCSglobalServices.com In the area of indoor air quality (IAQ) in particular, LEED v4 expands the credit provided for low-emitting materials related to the IAQ impacts of products on human health. Previous iterations of the low-emitting materials credit included the same standards for IAQ performance, but for a smaller set of indoor products. Now, in a time when more of us are demanding greater transparency about what goes into the products we use, the LEED v4 Low-emitting materials credit represents a natural progression in green building by asking, “How do the indoor products that are a part of our everyday lives affect the quality of the air we breathe?” SCS Global Services: Insights LEEDing THE CONVERSATION Before the introduction of LEED in 1998, the building industry largely viewed commercial and residential structures as environments best designed to keep the outdoors out. Instead, the USGBC proposed that we consider each building a living organism of systems comparable to the human body, similarly dependent on access to natural light and fresh air to ensure optimal health and efficient resource use. LEED Version 4 (v4), introduced in late 2013, ups the ante with new levels of accountability and transparency in building operations. LEED v4 RAISES THE STANDARD FOR TRANSPARENCY IN PRODUCT INDOOR AIR QUALITY CERTIFICATION LEED (Leadership in Energy & Environmental Design), the green building certification program developed by the US Green Building Council (USGBC), changed the way we look at the environmental impacts of buildings, both inside and out. 2000 Powell St., Ste 600 Emeryville, CA. 94608 1.800.326.3228 [email protected]
4
Embed
LEED v4 RAISES THE STANDARD FOR … · In the area of indoor air quality (IAQ) in particular, LEED v4 expands the credit provided for low-emitting materials related to the IAQ impacts
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
www.SCSglobalServices.com
In the area of indoor air quality (IAQ)
in particular, LEED v4 expands the
credit provided for low-emitting
materials related to the IAQ impacts of
products on human health. Previous
iterations of the low-emitting materials
credit included the same standards
for IAQ performance, but for a smaller
set of indoor products. Now, in a
time when more of us are demanding
greater transparency about what
goes into the products we use, the
LEED v4 Low-emitting materials credit
represents a natural progression in
green building by asking, “How do the
indoor products that are a part of our
everyday lives affect the quality of the
air we breathe?”
SCS Global Services: Insights
LEEDing THE CONVERSATION
Before the introduction
of LEED in 1998, the
building industry
largely viewed
commercial and residential structures
as environments best designed to
keep the outdoors out. Instead, the
USGBC proposed that we consider
each building a living organism of
systems comparable to the human
body, similarly dependent on access
to natural light and fresh air to ensure
optimal health and efficient resource
use. LEED Version 4 (v4), introduced in
late 2013, ups the ante with new levels
of accountability and transparency in
building operations.
LEED v4 RAISES THE STANDARD FOR TRANSPARENCY IN PRODUCT INDOOR AIR QUALITY CERTIFICATIONLEED (Leadership in Energy & Environmental Design), the green building certification program developed by the US Green Building Council (USGBC), changed the way we look at the environmental impacts of buildings, both inside and out.
Healthy Buildings From a health, safety and comfort standpoint, the new
LEED IAQ credits are extremely important. Most of
us spend up to 90 percent of our time indoors, so it’s
essential that building interiors provide good air quality.
When left unchecked, volatile organic compounds
(VOCs) emitted from furniture, flooring and other indoor
products can pose health problems ranging from minor
skin irritations to more serious difficulties with breathing
and central nervous system function. New building
interiors, when not evaluated for indoor air quality
performance, can have high levels of VOC off-gassing of
formaldehyde, naphthalene, and other chemicals, due to
the collective generation of VOC emissions from multiple
sources over a short period of time.
Formaldehyde is an example of a chemical of concern
with a large number of possible sources. To meet the
standard’s stringent formaldehyde requirements, a
product’s predicted indoor air concentrations must
be only a small factor above the chemical’s outdoor
air concentrations.
Setting Indoor Air Quality StandardsProper IAQ testing determines if unsafe levels of VOCs
are emitted from a particular product, and ultimately
provides building specifiers an informed choice when
seeking the most environmentally responsible interiors
materials. In order to achieve the credit for low-
emitting materials under LEED v4, compliance must
be demonstrated through emissions testing of interior
construction materials and furniture. Paints, adhesives,
coatings, flooring, ceiling and wall systems and insulation
must be compliant with the California Department
of Public Health (CDPH) Standard Method V1.1. For
furniture systems, components and seating, the testing
standard is the ANSI/BIFMA Furniture Standards M7.1-
2011and e3-2011, Section 7.6.
Testing ProtocolsThese emissions testing protocols require that product
samples must now be emission-tested in tightly
controlled chambers that simulate typical interior
environments found in office and educational buildings.
Chamber results are used in a simple model that
includes building size, ventilation rate, and amount of
installed material to predict indoor air concentrations of
the pollutants of concern. The predicted concentrations
in a scenario are then compared to the exposure
guidelines to determine if the product’s VOC emissions
are acceptable – that is, if they pass or fail.
Whether building on previous standards, as CDPH
Standard Method V1.1 does, or introducing new ones
created through industry consensus per ANSI/BIFMA
M7.1 and e3, the USGBC’s choice of these two protocols
acknowledges the value it places on well-defined
procedures and transparency in setting and meeting
environmental benchmarks. USGBC, itself a consensus-
driven organization answerable to stakeholders,
understands the importance of open access and visibility
in all policies and practices.
Lab Engineer Places Chair in Emissions Test Chamber Photo Courtesy of Berkeley Analytical
3
The Certifier’s Role in Supporting TransparencyTransparency is enhanced when the third-party certification body conducts its business openly by providing easily
accessible information regarding its processes and results. The certification body can further support transparency by
providing detailed certificates , searchable lists of certified companies and products, and direct access to standards used.
By contrast, certification bodies that are vague in describing how or even if their methodologies meet LEED credit criteria,
or that claim “proprietary” processes, are not operating in the genuine spirit of transparency.
Architects, designers and specifiers can be certain they are making the best informed choices to support their
IAQ objectives by selecting products certified by organizations with an established track record of experience, trust,
and transparency.
Products Certified
Transparent ScenarioDate Valid
Transparent Claim
Accreditation
Features of IAQ Certificate
4
IAQ Certification with SCSThe USGBC has identified the criteria required to certify
products that meet the LEED low-emitting materials
credit, and SCS Global Services (SCS) certifications
meet those specifications. USGBC recognizes SCS
Indoor Advantage™ and SCS Indoor Advantage Gold™
certifications as meeting the LEED v4 low-emitting
materials credit criteria, as well as the Resilient Floor
Covering Institute’s FloorScore® program, for which SCS
is the exclusive certifier.
SCS works with four independent testing laboratories