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Wednesday, May 7, 2008
A Little "Green" Caution
May 7 2008 9:07AM | Permalink | Email this | Comments (2) |
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By Glenn Singer
I am a member of the Building Products Issues Committee which consists of home builders, manufacturers and other industry officials. The purpose of this committee is to review various product performance issues and to encourage dialogue with manufacturers and builders to be proactive on getting to the bottom of issues and solving them before they become major issues.
NAHB’s legal staff is very concerned about the potential liabilities that can be associated with Green Building in terms of customer expectations, builder and manufacturer claims and of the performance of the green home. In my opinion, there is a concern here but, there is also an opportunity for manufacturers to step up and provide valid information about the green aspects of there products, become knowledgeable about the various green building standards and to help builders meet them.
Reader Comments
at 5/13/2008 8:35:28 AM, G. Wood said:
The key is EDUCATION:
Of the Builder, his/her representatives. Of the Home buyer.
On the performance aspects of "green products" and how such products (e.g. programmable thermostats, et.) work and what the overall impact will be of choices such as "sealing the envelope" (foam); radiant barriers; etc.
Managing expectations up front is key in keeping "green" in the building equation and eliminating call backs, unhappy customers; and litigation.
at 6/13/2008 10:39:47 AM, M. Ashcroft said:
How are the "concerns" about Green building any different from concerns related to non-sustainable building? The point of Green building is to rectify hazardous aspects of standard building practices we've accepted for so long. There are bound to be unintended consequences, but philosophically it's infinitely more sound than previous building ethics.
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