This article appeared in the February
8, 2008 edition of AIArchitect.
When was the
last time you saw any kind of architectural publication that
did not have something on sustainability? It is difficult
to be an architect today and not know about ‘Sustainability” and
the “Green Building Movement.” Even if you do
not have LEED-AP behind your name, you know what LEED is, and
you or your clients or even some state and local governments
are demanding that your projects should be LEED certified.
But in our haste to make all things green, we may be losing
the bigger picture.
Green buildings
are but part of a larger and more comprehensive landscape
of conservation and sustainable development. The President’s Council on Sustainable Development set ten
goals including health and the environment, economic prosperity,
conservation of nature, and stewardship. Goal six, “Sustainable
Communities,” requires us to “encourage people
to work together to create healthy communities where natural
and historic resources are preserved, jobs are available, sprawl
is contained, neighborhoods are secure, education is lifelong,
transportation and health care are accessible, and all citizens
have opportunities to improve the quality of their lives.” Yet
some architects, so proud of their LEED certified buildings,
don’t seem to think that the old building razed to make
way for the new is even part of the equation. The LEED Rating
system certainly does not subtract points for the loss of the
embodied energy in the old building or the energy expended
in razing and carting it away to the landfill. Nor does it
give points for salvaging “first growth” wood or
masonry materials to be used elsewhere. Actually, LEED metrics
don’t really account for a great deal of the green aspects
found in historic buildings; making it more difficult than
it should be to achieve LEED certification when renovating,
restoring, or adding to an historic structure…potentially
tipping the scale toward replacement due to the metrics not
the actual sustainability.
The summer
2007 issue of The Newsletter of The AIA Historic Resources
Committee reported that members of AIA, The National Trust
for Historic Preservation (NTHP), Association for Preservation
Technology (APT), and The National Park Service (NPS) met with
representatives from 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.” James J. Malanaphy III, AIA
indicated, “USGBC acknowledges there are important aspects
currently absent in the LEED rating systems – including
historic preservation, smart growth, and cultural value.”
The potential
results of ignoring the need to balance the new construction
of green buildings with sustaining and improving the existing
built environment has prompted Wayne Curtis, A Cautionary
Tale, to write, “One might be tempted to compare
the recent green wave with the rise of modernism more than
a half-century ago. Planners and architects back then didn’t
just want buildings to look different; they also wanted to
change the direction society was headed. The old ways of thinking
were outmoded. Yesterday’s buildings solved yesterday’s
problems; new buildings were needed to solve the problems of
today - and tomorrow. Of course, many people will recall what
happened to America’s historic fabric the last time we
undertook a nationwide revamping of the built landscape. The
result was urban renewal, and it left many of our best urban
areas in tatters and many of our historic buildings in piles
of rubble. And though hardly anyone would argue against the
need to reduce our consumption of dwindling resources, one
other word might come to mind when listening to those who envision
a brave new world filled with environmentally friendly new
buildings: Uh-oh.”
Some of us
old preservationists are more than a bit concerned that until
the LEED rating system takes the sustainable aspects of older
buildings into greater consideration, good intentioned efforts
toward mandating sustainable design potentially could have
similarly disastrous outcomes for historic structures as
we saw in the 1960s – 1980s. In my state of Indiana,
it recently took a group of genteel women ages 78 to 94 to
make a “naked ladies” calendar to raise enough
money and awareness to save their county courthouse. And that
was before the cost of LEED mandates was added into the equation.
There is proposed legislation before the Indiana General Assembly
that would require a Silver LEED level for all new public construction
and any modification to existing public structures. With the
current LEED metrics which give little credit for the inherent “greenness” of
historic structures and no penalties for environmental impact
of discarding the old structures, one might expect some county
commissioners to prefer to sell or demolish rather than refurbish
existing public structures. The AIA HRC report on the meeting
of preservation groups with the USGBC indicated that the outcomes
of the meeting were positive and a willingness was demonstrated
by all to make substantial progress toward shared goals. This
is encouraging news, but until the LEED rating system changes,
the responsibility falls to our profession to take the leadership
in educating our clients and the public about the inherent
green nature of historic buildings.
Wayne Curtis
also writes, “New green buildings, brimming
with the latest in modern technology, are perceived to be on
one side; the old buildings, full of quaint, inefficient technologies
and drafty windows, are on the other. Which leads one to ask:
Just how “ungreen” and energy inefficient are those
older buildings? ...Not very, it turns out. The reputation
of older structures as energy sieves, in short, is simply not
justified by the data.” Stephen Farneth, FAIA likewise
points out that “sustainability and historic preservation
share many underlying values, such as an emphasis on resource
conservation and energy efficiency. Most buildings built before
World War II have features that are inherently energy efficient
and sustainable, such as excellent cross-ventilation, operable
windows, extensive use of glazing, and awnings to mitigate
solar heat gain. Buildings built after World War II frequently
rely heavily on mechanical systems for climate control. Many
have been sited without consideration for natural lighting
or ventilation and lack insulation or thermal mass. Nevertheless,
while it can be difficult to balance preservation and sustainability
for Modernist buildings, many are worth the extra effort.”
The larger
picture of sustainability and green architecture must acknowledge
the existing environment in considering the overall impact
of proposed construction. Donovan Rypkema of PlaceEconomics
says, “Razing historic buildings results
in a triple hit on scarce resources. First, we throw away thousands
of dollars of embodied energy. Second, we are replacing it
with materials vastly more consumptive of energy. What are
most historic structures built from? Brick, plaster, concrete
and timber. What are among the least energy consumptive of
materials? Brick, plaster, concrete and timber. What are major
component of new buildings? Plastic, steel, vinyl and aluminum.
What is the most energy consumptive of materials? Plastic,
steel, vinyl, and aluminum. Third, recurring embodied energy
savings increase dramatically as a building life stretches
over fifty years. You’re a fool or a fraud if you say
you are an environmentally conscious builder and yet are throwing
away historic buildings, and their components.”
Architects
are front and center in the Green Building Movement in support
of sustainable communities, and therefore must understand
that new green buildings are but one of the factors along with
historic and natural resource integration that provides the
full answer to a sustainable built environment. It is important
to understand the full impacts of demolishing existing structures,
from the embodied energy that is destroyed, to the inherent
sustainability of the materials being discarded, to the many
features of historic structures which are inherently green.
In addition, the impacts on local culture and values should
be considered, as suggested by the President’s Council
on Sustainability. And it is our responsibility, if we claim
to support sustainable design, to fully understand these issues
while incorporating them into our practice and educating others.
Ultimately, as Carl Elefante, AIA LEED AP eloquently says, “We
can not build our way to sustainability; we must conserve our
way to it.”
Curtis, Wayne, A Cautionary Tale, Preservation, National Trust
for Historic Preservation, Washington DC, Jan/Feb 2008
Elefante, Carl,
AIA LEED AP; The Greenest Building Is…One
That Is Already Built, Forum Journal, National Trust For Historic
Preservation, Washington DC, Summer 2007
Farneth, Stephen,
FAIA, Sustaining the Past: Guidelines For Historic Preservation
Shouldn’t Have To Clash With LEED
Requirements, Since Preservation and Sustainability Share Many
Similar Goals, GreenSource Magazine, GreenSource.Construction.Com,
McGraw Hill. October 2007
Malanaphy, James J. AIA, NTHP Sustainable Preservation Coalition
Meeting with USGBC, The Newsletter of The Historic Resources
Committee, The American Institute of Architects, Washington
DC Summer 2007
President’s Council on Sustainable Development, Sustainable
America – A New Consensus, U.S. Government Printing Office,
Washington DC, February 1996
Rypkema, Donovan D, Downtown Revitalization, Sustainability,
and Historic Preservation, National Main Streets Conference
Closing Plenary Session, Washington DC, March 2007.
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