The International Code
Council (ICC), the American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air
Conditioning Engineers (ASHRAE), the U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC), and
the Illuminating Engineering Society of North America (IES) recently announced
the launch of the International Green Construction Code (IGCC), representing
the merger of two national efforts to develop adoptable and enforceable green
building codes. The IGCC provides the building industry with language that both
broadens and strengthens building codes in a way that will accelerate the
construction of high performance green buildings across the U.S.
For decades, ICC and ASHRAE
have worked to develop codes and standards that become the industry standard of
care for the design, construction, operations and maintenance of residential
and commercial buildings in the U.S. and internationally. In coordination with
the efforts of ICC and ASHRAE, USGBC has been leading a nationwide green
building movement centered on the LEED Green Building Rating System since LEED
was launched in 2000. The convergence of these efforts in the IGCC is perhaps
the most significant development in the buildings industry in the past 10
years.
Leveraging ICC’s unrivaled
delivery infrastructure to reach all 50 states and more than 22,000 local
jurisdictions and ASHRAE, USGBC and IES’s technical strengths, this partnership
will accelerate the proliferation of green building codes and standards
developed jointly by ICC, ASHRAE and USGBC and IES, across the country and
around the globe. The newly launched International Green Construction Code
(IGCC) establishes a previously unimaginable regulatory framework for the
construction of high performance commercial buildings that are safe,
sustainable and by the book.
A landmark addition to the
technical content of the IGCC is the inclusion of ANSI/ASHRAE/USGBC/IES
Standard 189.1, Standard for the Design of High Performance, Green Buildings
Except Low-Rise Residential Buildings, as an alternate path of compliance. Standard
189.1 is a set of technically rigorous requirements, which like the IGCC,
covers criteria including water use efficiency, indoor environmental quality,
energy efficiency, materials and resource use, and the building’s impact on its
site and its community. Standard 189.1 was written by experts representing all
areas of the building industry, who contributed tens of thousands of man hours.
Developed in a little over three years, the standard underwent four public
reviews in which some 2,500 comments were received.
“The emergence of green
building codes and standards is an important next step for the green building
movement, establishing a much-needed set of baseline regulations for green
buildings that is adoptable, usable and enforceable by jurisdictions,” said ICC
Chief Executive Officer
Richard P. Weiland. “The IGCC
provides a vehicle for jurisdictions to regulate green for the design and
performance of new and renovated buildings in a manner that is integrated with
existing codes as an overlay, allowing all new buildings to reap the rewards of
improved design and construction practices.”
“Bringing together the code
expertise of ICC with technical expertise of ASHRAE to create a comprehensive
green building code will accelerate our transformation to more sustainable
building practices,”
Gordon Holness, ASHRAE president, said.
“ASHRAE is committed to providing the design guidance building designers and
engineers need to reduce the energy consumption of buildings.”
“The U.S. Green Building
Council’s mission is market transformation and we’ve long recognized the need
to reach beyond the market leaders served by LEED to accomplish this goal,”
said
Rick Fedrizzi, President, CEO and Founding Chairman of
the U.S. Green Building Council. “Broadening the scope of the codes and
establishing a higher floor allows us to continue to raise the ceiling, a
critical factor in how the building industry is working to mitigate climate
change. We are thrilled to see this set of complementary green building codes
and standards; our organizations working collaboratively will advance green
building nationwide in a way that was never before possible.”
"IES is pleased to
support the collaborative efforts of the organizations which demonstrate
expertise in code and technical standards development in this comprehensive
green building code,” said
Rita Harrold, IES Director of
Technology. “IES looks forward to ongoing guidance for sustainable building
practices."
Click here for more
information on the IGCC.Source:
ASHRAE