Duel or Dual: Co-Benefits of LEED and Envision

被引:0
|
作者
Dunford, Eric [1 ]
Gillis, Kaitlyn [2 ]
机构
[1] Stantec Consulting Ltd, 1100-111 Dunsmuir St, Vancouver, BC V6B 6A3, Canada
[2] Stantec Consulting Ltd, 400-10220 103 Ave NW, Edmonton, AB T5J 0K4, Canada
来源
INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON SUSTAINABLE INFRASTRUCTURE 2019: LEADING RESILIENT COMMUNITIES THROUGH THE 21ST CENTURY | 2019年
关键词
Envision; Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design; LEED; certification; sustainability; environmental impact; industrial; health and wellbeing;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Although they share a common goal of promoting more sustainable design and construction practices, the Envision and Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) sustainability rating and certification frameworks come from separate backgrounds and their 'roots' are reflected in how they are practically applied to projects. LEED was conceived to guide green building design based on occupant comfort and energy efficiency. Envision, in contrast, is focused more on the extended impacts that infrastructure projects can have on communities. Each certification framework hypothetically applies to distinct types of projects, with LEED reserved for occupied buildings and Envision reserved for non-occupied infrastructure projects. In practice, however the distinction is often blurry. Public infrastructure assets such as water and wastewater pump and treatment facilities often include spaces that are temporarily occupied yet experience different challenges in design from what either framework was conceived to address. Some owners have found value in drawing on the guidance in both LEED and Envision to achieve their performance goals for their assets. By examining infrastructure projects that have sought dual certification under both LEED and Envision, this paper will explore the relative benefits and limitations inherent in each framework, and areas where there are overlap and synergy in guidance provided. This paper will seek to answer the question of how these tools complement one another, and what value practitioners using each framework in isolation could learn from critically examining the other.
引用
收藏
页码:466 / 473
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Co-benefits from energy policies in China
    He, K.
    Lei, Y.
    Pan, X.
    Zhang, Y.
    Zhang, Q.
    Chen, D.
    ENERGY, 2010, 35 (11) : 4265 - 4272
  • [32] Climate policy and the concept of co-benefits in India
    Theresa Stahlke
    Journal of Social and Economic Development, 2023, 25 : 86 - 102
  • [33] Predictable SCR Co-Benefits for Mercury Control
    Pritchard, Scot
    POWER ENGINEERING, 2009, 113 (01) : 42 - +
  • [34] Determining AQCS Mercury Removal Co-Benefits
    Tyree, Corey A.
    Allen, Jonathan O.
    POWER, 2010, 154 (07) : 26 - +
  • [35] Modeling the Clean Development Mechanism: Direct benefits, co-benefits and priorities
    Yang, HW
    Kainuma, M
    Matsuoka, Y
    MODELING AND CONTROL IN ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES 2001, 2002, : 109 - 114
  • [36] Co-benefits as a rationale and co-benefits as a factor for urban climate action: linking air quality and emission reductions in Moscow, Paris, and Montreal
    Roggero, Matteo
    Gotgelf, Anastasiia
    Eisenack, Klaus
    CLIMATIC CHANGE, 2023, 176 (12)
  • [37] Co-benefits as a rationale and co-benefits as a factor for urban climate action: linking air quality and emission reductions in Moscow, Paris, and Montreal
    Matteo Roggero
    Anastasiia Gotgelf
    Klaus Eisenack
    Climatic Change, 2023, 176
  • [38] Co-benefits from health and health systems to education
    Lee, Ines
    HEALTH POLICY, 2024, 142
  • [39] Air pollutant reduction co-benefits of CDM in China
    Gao, L.-J. (gaolijie@nankai.edu.cn), 1697, Chinese Society for Environmental Sciences (33):
  • [40] Wellbeing and Society: Towards Quantification of the Co-benefits of Wellbeing
    Maccagnan, Anna
    Wren-Lewis, Sam
    Brown, Helen
    Taylor, Tim
    SOCIAL INDICATORS RESEARCH, 2019, 141 (01) : 217 - 243