Title: |
Life Cycle Impact Assessment for the Building Design and Construction Industry
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Resource Type: |
document --> technical publication --> report
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Country: |
USA
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Year: |
2005 |
Availability: |
Life Cycle Assessment and Sustainability, A Supplement to Building Design and Construction, 3: 22-24, November
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Author 1/Producer: |
Bare, J.C.
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Other Authors/Producers: |
T. Gloria
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Author / Producer Type: |
Media and publishers sector
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Publisher: |
Building Design & Construction, Reed Business Information
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Publisher City: |
2000 Clearwater Drive, Oak Brook, IL 60523, USA
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Format (e.g. PDF): |
PDF
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Size: (e.g. 20mb) |
2.6
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EUGRIS Keyword(s): |
Brownfields Contaminated land-->Wider impacts / sustainability-->Assessment tools
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Short description: |
EXTRACT: Life cycle assessment, or LCA, is arguably today’s most
talked-about topic in the green building movement.
Architects, engineers, contractors, building owners, environmentalists,
and government officials want assurance that the products and
materials they are using to design and construct buildings are the most
beneficial to the environment—“from cradle to grave.”
Similarly, forward-looking manufacturers of green building products are
searching for scientifically objective ways to distinguish the long-term
environmental benefits of their products.
Interest in LCA was spurred a year ago, when the U.S. Green Building
Council created an “LCA into LEED” Task Force to determine
whether and how LCA could be incorporated into the next version of
its LEED rating system.
Other efforts, such as the U.S. Life Cycle Inventory Database project,
the National Institute of Standards & Technology’s BEES program, the
Green Globes rating system, and the UNEP/SETAC Life Cycle
Initiative, also point to growing interest in LCA.
And surely LCA will be high on the agenda of the White House
Summit on Sustainability, scheduled for January 24-25, 2006.
The editors offer this White Paper in the hope that it will inform and
educate the design and construction community as to the growing
importance of life cycle assessment to the built environment. We
welcome your comments.
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Submitted By:
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Professor Paul Bardos WhoDoesWhat?
Last update: 06/06/2007
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