Upgrade the Energy and Environmental Performance of Existing Buildings This GreenSource guide explains how to transform existing buildings into more energy-efficient; resource-conserving green buildings. The book provides a clear process that guides you; step-by-step; through each phase of moving building operations and maintenance toward the goal of a green-certified building.Greening Existing Buildings features proven technologies and operating methods; and shows building owners and facility managers how to green buildings in a cost-effective way. This practical and insightful resource highlights the ten best practices for greening existing buildings; and includes more than 25 case studies of successful implementations and 35 insightful interviews with industry experts and building owners and managers.Greening Existing Buildings covers: Economic drivers and market dynamicsGetting the U.S. EPAs ENERGY STAR ratingU.S. Green Building Councils LEED for Existing Buildings ratingMaking the business case for greening existing buildingsCost of greening and setting realistic project budgetsEnergy-efficient building upgradesSustainable site management and water conservation retrofitsCrafting purchasing and waste management policiesUpgrading indoor environmental qualityManaging a LEED for Existing Buildings: Operations and Maintenance (EBOM) certification project; from beginning to end
#3518788 in eBooks 2007-03-30 2007-03-30File Name: B00872FKLM
Review
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful. What is an architect and why do they build the models they do?By David ShawSomewhat academic approach to the role of architectural models in Western civilization. from the ancient Greeks up to the end of the 20th Century.I found this in the architectural library at a nearby university (my daughter had a junior high school class project on building a scale model of a Gothic cathedral. and I first thought this book might be a handbook on building scale models. but not so). Still. it looked to be an interesting read (for those used to reading works by academics. at least).Most readers of this book will be students of architecture. but for this non-architect I found the exploration of what an architect was and how they were trained over the past 5000 years an interesting mirror of how Western culture has changed over the centuries. (Im speaking here as a social scientist more used to reading history than works in the humanities).The first and fourth chapters are well-done surveys. though the second chapter seemed light in analytical depth in places. The third chapter provides formal framing of his argument between the first and second halves of the book. too academic for many readers but mercifully brief.The payoff to the too-academic structure of the book comes in the last (fifth) chapter. as the author attempts to deconstruct the work of a handful of architects from the 20th Century. focusing on the role of drawings versus physical models of specific projects in their body of work. I found the approach persuasive for all of the architects examined except for the last. Andrew Libeskind (spelling?). but at least some illumination came of it.A read of a day and a half for a casual reader outside the field. Id be interested to hear what specialists in the field would have to say about the book. For instance. is this book based on refereed articles in the field? And how does it related to other scholarly work in the field of architectural studies?