Posts tagged ‘SERF certification’

October 23, 2012

SPreading the word

by Stan Samuel

As more and more properties Catch the Wave with SERF Certification, we’re beginning to fall behind in processing applications.   Maintaining our early decision to cede the lengthy process award to the other 4-letter certification, we are, instead, embarking on a fix.

Our new professional designation SERF Professional (SP) will enable real estate professionals to act as third party verifiers for SERF Certification applications.  SPs will be independent from SERF and will set their own fees and contract directly with certification applicants.

SERF is partnering with Centre for Sustainability and Excellence in Chicago to produce a one-day training program and examination to qualify as a SP.  The course is being held around the country in SERF certified facilities, beginning Thursday, January 31 at DIRTT’s Chicago Green Learning Center.

More information will be coming out shortly, including how to register for the class as well as qualifications to become an SP. As they do, we’ll update you.

May 21, 2012

Can Governments Really Afford LEED?

by Stan Samuel

There seems a refreshing change in the air questioning municipal, state and federal agency mandates to LEED certify new structures under their purview.

No one finding their way here will question the environmental and social good–even a social demand–for building green by our public sector.  But in the midst of budget crises resulting in spending cuts at every level of government, the high cost of obtaining LEED certification (some 10 times higher than SERF, often more) is beginning to raise fiscal eyebrows.

 

Recent pressure on the DepartmentofDefense and the GeneralServicesAdministration at the federal level expose serious opposition to LEED mandates by those agencies from both Congress and industry groups.  One wonders whether taxpayer groups will join the fray if the GSA is more forthright and current on their calculation of the cost to obtain LEED certification (see our earlier posting, Paying, andpaying, fortheLEEDlabel.)

 

Local mandates and costs are harder to aggregate and quantify.  I will relate one anecdote from my travels this week in California presenting  SERF to AIA chapters. Following my talk at AIASanDiego, a Fire and Rescue project manager from the City of San Diego offered that owing to the City’s requirement that any of its structures of at least 5,000 square feet be LEED Silver, there are necessary public safety structures which go unbuilt because the city does not have the requisite money and staff time to devote to the exhaustive process.   A more streamlined and less expensive route to certification would not only save the City money, but allow them to move forward with mothballed projects.

 

Gee, we couldn’t have said it better ourselves.

May 8, 2012

Paying (and paying) for the LEED Label

by Stan Samuel

As mentioned in past blogs, the burdensome cost of LEED certification–measured in both time and money–lies in  consultant fees and documentation.  A very reliable study commissioned by the US General Services Administration (GSA) proves the point.

The GSA is an independent federal agency responsible for the construction, operation, and maintenance of federal facilities, including courthouses, office buildings, land ports of entry, and research facilities.

GSA commissioned this report to identify the incremental cost of LEED certification for two buildings: A new mid-rise federal Courthouse and a mid-rise federal office building modernization. The report analyzed both the incremental construction costs as well as soft costs–i.e. LEED-based documentation and consultation fees.

The incremental cost was calculated from a baseline construction cost for building to GSA’s  stringent guidelines. These guidelines required commissioning on all their buildings, higher energy efficiency than the code requirements, energy efficient underfloor air delivery systems and use of a large proportion of recycled materials in construction.

Given all these existing sustainable practices, the study showed that the additional consultation and documentation cost to be LEED certified was $112,412 for LEED Certified status up to high of $190,052 for LEED Gold status for the Courthouse Building. Similarly, the soft costs for the Office Modernization project was $106,716 for certified and $177, 328 for Gold.

Also according to the report, the soft costs as a percentage of the total construction costs will be significantly higher for buildings of smaller sizes than the buildings (260,000 to 300,000 square feet) in the study.

I wonder how much greener these buildings would have been if taxpayer dollars were invested in performance improvements rather than on consultant and documentation fees.