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The following article by Historic Landmarks Foundation of Indiana President Marsh Davis, as published in the June 23-29, 2008 Indianapolis Business Journal, offers his view regarding historic structures and LEED.
 
 


Waste not, want not....

In the zeal to “go green,” new construction that uses sexy, high-tech ways to reduce energy consumption gets the most attention, but historic preservation has been green all along. The most environmentally responsible approach is to conserve, not to waste what’s already built.

Historic Landmarks Foundation applauds the U.S. Green Building Council’s LEED process, and in the future we hope to see preservation receive more favorable treatment in its rating system. LEED is geared for consumption: it gives points for recycling in a new construction project but no points for keeping an entire historic building. It assigns no negative points for the loss of embodied energy, consuming energy in demolition, sending tons to the landfill, or building on former agricultural land.

Restoring historic structures and revitalizing older neighborhoods reduces waste and limits the demand for new infrastructure and new materials. In renovating a historic structure, you preserve a limited resource and conserve embodied energy—the energy already spent to quarry the limestone, make the bricks, mill the lumber. And historic buildings are inevitably made of organic products, either renewable or long-lasting ones that are low on the energy-consuming scale—wood, brick, limestone, slate, plaster—rather than aluminum, vinyl, and plastic.

Unlike much of contemporary construction—franchise buildings and big box stores replaced with startling frequency—our forebears made places to last. And they built with efficiency and sustainability in mind, before they were buzz words. Old buildings have high ceilings, transoms and operable windows placed for cross-ventilation and “daylighting” (the new term for using natural light from windows and skylights to reduce electricity demand). Pre-World War II buildings used porches, canvas awnings and shutters, operable ones, not for decoration but to screen a room during the heat of the day. They have plaster walls and ceilings, much more energy-conserving than drywall. Many have (or had) wood storm windows and screens that with proper maintenance would outlast a human lifetime. Our ancestors also strategically planted trees to screen and shade buildings.

But aren’t old buildings energy hogs? Some are, but so are many newer buildings. Can historic buildings be made more energy efficient? Of course they can. Attic, crawlspace and basement insulation make a big difference in energy consumption and can easily be added. A yearly check of caulking around windows, doors and the sill of a building is essential. (Most heat loss in a building is through the roof and the sill, not the windows or the walls.) Storm windows, interior or exterior, also make a difference.

I plead for retaining historic windows. Original windows are an essential feature of an old house or commercial building. Heavy advertising convinces owners they need vinyl replacement windows, but these often do not duplicate the size and shape of the original opening, and they’re not paned in the same pattern or dimension. Sometimes they lamely try to mimic the original with thin, flat plastic strips embedded in the double-paned glass—a fake and pale imitation and an aesthetic disappointment. In less than a generation, the replacement windows will need to be replaced, whereas old windows can be repaired and weatherstipped. You can reglaze existing panes, or retrofit the wood frames with laminated or insulated glass, and maintain the original appearance of the house.

Historic Landmarks Foundation of Indiana backs the National Trust for Historic Preservation’s new sustainability initiative that combines educating and influencing policy makers, quantifying environmental impacts of demolition and new construction vs. preservation, and promoting ways to employ green technologies in rehabbing older structures.

In our 21st-century zeal to be green, we should remember the age-old adage, “waste not, want not.” Preserving old buildings is all about not wasting: not wasting embodied energy and human labor, not wasting irreplaceable architecture, not wasting culture, and not wasting evidence of history and the lives of those who preceded us on this earth.

Marsh Davis, President
Historic Landmarks Foundation of Indiana