This document discusses what constitutes a sustainable or "green" home. It describes various green building certification programs like LEED for Homes, the National Green Building Standard, and Energy Star, which set standards for energy efficiency, indoor air quality, water conservation, and other sustainability features. These certifications are helping to define green building practices and make sustainability more understandable for homebuyers, builders and real estate professionals. The top reason cited for wanting a green home is reduced energy costs. Green homes are projected to make up 10% of new home construction by 2010.
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On Common Ground: Summer 2008
1. • Green Homes
• Marketing Sustainability
• Eco-Friendly Schools
The
SUMMER 2008
Future
2. Sustainable
Smart Growth
While many de nitions for sustainable greater fuel-ef ciency. A more dif cult task
development have been put forward, for most Americans is reducing the miles
the simplest test for sustainability may they must drive. It is smart growth that
be “if we continue doing things this way, will help achieve this reduction, if coupled
will future generations have food to eat, with more ef cient use and conservation
clean water to drink, a functioning natural of land.
environment and a functioning economy?” In this issue of On Common Ground,
As the seriousness of climate change we present the many approaches that
sinks in, sustainable development and its REALTORS®, home builders, school
components, “green building” and smart of cials, environmentalists, public of cials
growth, are increasingly seen not just as an and concerned citizens are using to shape
improvement, but as vital to humans’ well- communities into sustainable human
being now and in the future. environments—communities that make
Three primary components of the built better use of our resources and reduce
environment signi cantly contribute to the damage we leave behind. Green
the greenhouse gases responsible for building is just the start; this issue also
climate change—the development of land, includes transportation alternatives,
transportation, and the construction and the local food movement, walkable
operation of buildings. Our response to neighborhoods, “green infrastructure”
global warming must address all of these. and eco-friendly schools. It will take all
Energy ef cient buildings are achieving of these and more to create sustainable
greater market acceptance, and many communities—sustainability requires
consumers are switching to vehicles with substantial, and sustained, commitment.
For more information on NAR and smart growth, go to www.realtor.org/smartgrowth.
For more information on NAR and Housing Opportunity, go to www.realtor.org/housingopportunity.
On Common Ground is published twice a year by the Government Affairs division of the NATIONAL ASSOCIATION
OF REALTORS® (NAR), and is distributed free of charge. The publication presents a wide range of views on smart growth
issues, with the goal of encouraging a dialogue among REALTORS®, elected of cials and other interested citizens. The opin-
ions expressed in On Common Ground are those of the authors and do not necessarily re ect the opinions or policy of
the NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS®, its members or af liate organizations.
Editor Special Issue Co-Editor
Joseph R. Molinaro Hugh Morris
Manager, Smart Growth Programs Smart Growth and Community Outreach Programs
NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS® NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS®
500 New Jersey Avenue, NW 500 New Jersey Avenue, NW
Washington, DC 20001 Washington, DC 20001
Distribution
For more copies of this issue or to be placed on our mailing list for future issues of On Common Ground, please
contact Ted Wright, NAR Government Affairs, at (202) 383-1206 or twright@realtors.org.
2 ON COMMON GROUND SUMMER 2008
3. On Common Ground
Summer 2008
What is a Sustainable House? 4
by Brad Broberg
Reduce. Reuse. Recycle. Sustain
Here Comes the Green Neighborhood 10
by David Goldberg
Green Infrastructure 18
by Brad Broberg
Marketing a Sustainable Future
REALTORS® Connect Buyers with
Energy Saving Homes 24
by Steve Wright
Seeking Green
REALTOR® Associations Provide a Helping
Hand to Achieve Sustainability. 28
by Steve Wright
Two-Wheeled Sustainability 34
by Barbara McCann
Walk This Way
American Cities Test Strategies to Promote
Alternative Transportation 40
by Judy Newman
Learning to Conserve
Eco-Friendly Schools Built for
Future Generations 48
by Christine Sexton
A Growing Trend
Smart Foods from Smart Growth 54
by John Van Gieson
REALTORS® Take Action 60
Making Smart Growth Happen
On Common Ground thanks the following contributors and organizations for photographs, illustrations
and artist renderings reprinted in this issue: Art Allen, Transit for Livable Communities; Frankie Barker,
Matanuska-Susitna Borough; Chris Bartle, Green Key Real Estate; Jacquie Berger, Just Food; Walter
Brown and Loren Heyns, Green Street Properties; Erica Burt, Farr Associates; Chris Carrel, Friends of
the Hylebos; Ted Chalgren, Cox and Dinkins, Inc.; City of Aurora, Ill.; Camila Clark, Maryland Of ce of
Tourism; Paul DeMaio, Virginia Division of Transportation; Mary Ebeling, Sheboygan County Planning
and Resources; Mark Gashler, Ecobroker®; Samnetta Gaye, Southside Community Land Trust; Lori Ito
Hardenbergh, Sidwell Friends School; Bob Hill, Vermont Association of REALTORS®; Tricia Jumonville,
ERA Colonial Real Estate; Ashley Katz, U.S. Green Building Council; Michael Kiefer, Green DC Realty;
Matt Kolb, Pedal to Properties; Nathan Norris, The Waters; Caroline Novak, Lancaster Farmland Trust;
Barbara Richey, Rails-to-Trails Conservancy; Rhonda Rosenberg, King County Housing Authority; Sarah
Soczka, Boelter + Lincoln; and Craig Tackabery, Walk Bike Marin.
3
4. What is a S U S T A I N A B L E H O U S E ?
By Brad Broberg
G
reen used to be just another color.
Now—like good schools and granite
countertops—it’s also a primary con-
sideration for homebuyers.
That’s true even when buyers
aren’t sure what green means.
“Some people know what to expect, but other people
say, ‘I want a green home. What does that entail?’” said As the demand for green
REALTOR® Chris Boardman, a certified EcoBroker®
with Intero Real Estate Services in Santa Cruz, Calif. homes grows, confusion about
Boardman’s training—he earned his EcoBroker® certifi- what it means to be green is
cation through EcoBroker® International—makes it easy
cause for concern.
for him to answer that question. In fact, he often answers
it before it’s asked. It’s a reflex. “When I walk through a As the demand for green homes grows, confusion about
house with people, I’ll point out that the windows are what it means to be green is cause for concern. Two
outdated or the attic needs insulation,” he said. organizations are helping buyers, builders and REAL-
Yet not everybody is so well-versed. Greenwashing—the TORS® unravel the green riddle by offering nationwide
act of misleading consumers about environmental green home rating systems.
practices, products or services—is an ongoing problem. Late last year, the U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC)
“Some home listings put green in there and there’s really launched Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design
nothing green about it at all,” Boardman said. (LEED) for Homes. The National Association of Home-
For buyers hoping to separate the green from the green- builders (NAHB) launched the National Green Building
washed, one bit of good news is the increasing number Program in February of 2008, which includes the National
of local green certification programs. More and more Green Building Standard (NGBS) begun last year.
builders, seeking to promote their green building prac- While the nuts and bolts may differ, the basic mecha-
tices, are joining these programs, which ensure homes nisms of the two programs—both voluntary—are simi-
reflect at least some shade of green. The catch is the sys- lar. Each mandates certain green features, awards points
tems aren’t widely recognized outside their regions, and for optional features, requires independent inspections
they don’t use a uniform rating or certification process. and has different levels of green certification. Whichever
4 ON COMMON GROUND SUMMER 2008
5. A 2007 survey by NAHB revealed that “reduced energy costs” was the
number one reason respondents would choose to buy a green home.
program a builder chooses, homes built to NGBS or remodelers can take to become a Green Certified Profes-
LEED specifications deliver more than a green sheen. sional. NARI also offers a 12-session green education
course that includes energy efficiency and conservation,
What makes a home truly green? Common benchmarks
indoor air quality, efficient use of resources, recycling of
include:
demolition material and renewable energy sources.
• Energy (effective insulation; high-performance win-
While NARI does not certify projects, the NGBS be-
dows; high-efficiency lighting).
ing developed by NAHB will include a rating system
• Indoor air (VOC-free finishes, adhesives and carpet- for green remodels. In addition, the USGBC and the
ing; radon-resistant construction; mechanical and American Society of Interior Designers Foundation
natural ventilation).
• Water (low-flow toilets and showerheads; rainwater
harvesting; graywater recycling).
• Landscaping (little or no lawn; native plants; limited
irrigation).
• Building products (materials with recycled content;
salvaged materials; lumber from certified forests).
• Siting/land use (conservation of natural features; com-
pact development; access to transit).
Look for those features to become more and more
mainstream with every passing year. By 2010, green
homes will account for 10 percent of the new homes
built annually, up from 2 percent in 2006, according to
a McGraw-Hill SmartMarket Report.
Besides the growing number of new homes being built
green, many existing homes are getting a green make-
over. Late last year, the National Association of the Re-
modeling Industry (NARI) began offering an exam that
5
6. Glenwood Park in Atlanta, Ga., is an entire community
built around green building principles.
recently rolled out REGREEN, a set of guidelines for
green remodeling projects. REGREEN does not include
a rating system. However, remodeling projects in which
a home is gutted can seek a LEED for Homes rating.
Many of the benchmarks for new green homes are
equally applicable to green makeovers. Specific tips
from the USGBC include: harnessing solar power; plug-
ging air leaks; using readily renewable materials such as
bamboo; switching to compact fluorescent light bulbs;
replacing forced-air heating with radiant floor heating;
installing a programmable thermostat; and switching to
Energy Star appliances (more about that later). If energy efficiency is a builder, buyer or remodeler’s sole
Right now, the green feature with the most buzz is goal, the Energy Star program is a third nationwide cer-
energy efficiency. A 2007 survey by NAHB revealed tification option. “Energy Star is very, very specifically
that “reduced energy costs” was the number one rea- designed to define highly energy-efficient products,”
son respondents would choose to buy a green home or said Sam Rashkin, national director of Energy Star for
remodel their existing home to make it greener. Next Homes. “We set the bar.”
came “because it would be healthier” and it’s “the right Energy Star is a joint program of the Environmental
thing to do for the environment.” Protection Agency (EPA) and the Department of Ener-
Energy Star is very specifically
designed to define highly
energy-efficient products.
6 ON COMMON GROUND
9. LEED ratings are managed by a net-
work of LEED for Homes Providers—
local organizations with experience
supporting green building.
Residents of The Waters community in Montgomery,
Ala., enjoy a warm day on their porch, which was spe-
cifically built to shade the interior rooms to cut down
on energy costs during the hot summer.
LEED ratings are managed by a network of LEED for independent inspection. Ratings by local associations
Homes Providers—local organizations with experience may or may not.
supporting green building. They contract with the Like LEED, the NGBS relies on local professionals to
USGBC to market the program, review scorecards and manage the rating process—including inspections. The
oversee independent inspections. NAHB Research Center awards final certification—
Builders earn points for meeting LEED requirements in bronze, silver, gold and emerald—based on points
nine categories: innovation and design process; location awarded in seven categories: water efficiency; energy
and linkages; sustainable sites; water efficiency; energy and efficiency; resource efficiency; lot and site development;
atmosphere; materials and resources; indoor environmental indoor environmental quality; global impact; and hom-
quality; awareness and education; and energy and atmo- eowner education.
sphere. Depending on a project’s total points, the USGBC Working with the International Code Council, the
awards a rating of certified, silver, gold or platinum. NAHB is seeking certification from the American Na-
The NGBS is based on Model Green Home Building tional Standards Institute (ANSI) for the NGBS—a pro-
Guidelines the NAHB published in 2005 to help its cess that ensures extensive public comment and consensus
member associations create local green building pro- decisions. “This will be the first and only residential green
grams such as Triangle Green in North Carolina and the building standard certified by ANSI,” said Schmidt. ●
Green Building Initiative in St. Louis, Mo. Together,
NAHB member associations have rated more than ADDITIONAL RESOURCES:
100,000 green homes. United States Green Building Council (LEED
The idea behind the NGBS is to offer builders another for Homes): www.thegreenhomeguide.org
rating option that is uniform as well as more demand- National Association of Home Builders
ing, said Calli Schmidt, director of environmental com- (NGBS): www.nahbgreen.org
munications with the NAHB. Energy Star for Homes: www.energystar.gov
“You can still build a green home with the [2005]
Brad Broberg is a Seattle-based freelance writer spe-
Guidelines,” said Schmidt. “But the new standard re- cializing in business and development issues. His work
flects the most recent in technology and knowledge.” appears regularly in the Puget Sound Business Jour-
A key difference: ratings under the NGBS require an nal and the Seattle Daily Journal of Commerce.
SUMMER 2008 9
10. Reduce. Reuse. Recycle. Sustain.
Here Comes the (Green) Neighborhood
By David Goldberg
s every REALTOR® knows, most peo-
A
ple who are looking for a place to live
are shopping for more than four walls
and a roof. They’re seeking a neighbor-
hood that reflects what they value in
life. But where does that leave the fam-
ily who is looking to live in a way that is as environmen-
tally sustainable and energy-efficient as possible? It’s true
there are plenty of cities with labeling programs designed
to help buyers identify a “green” home. But how do you
know when you’ve found a green neighborhood?
When you’re building a green
neighborhood, you’re fundamen-
tally concerned with the size of two
footprints: land and carbon.
10 ON COMMON GROUND SUMMER 2008
11. Glenwood Park will harvest
approximately 35,000
gallons of water per week
using a combination of
storm water and well water,
thus avoiding any use of
potable water from the city
of Atlanta for its drought
resistant landscaping.
Smart growth focuses on the land
footprint and efficiency of resources.
Some argue that the criteria for a green neighborhood
are fairly well satisfied by building according to the
principles of smart growth. That means conserving
land, focusing development first in areas that are already
developed, providing transportation options other than
cars, and creating mixed-use development that makes
neighborhoods compact and walkable. Others say that
smart growth, as it is typically discussed, does not quite
touch all the bases of sustainability.
“When you’re building a green neighborhood, you’re
fundamentally concerned with the size of two foot-
prints: land and carbon,” says Walter Brown, a developer
The term “green neighborhood” is relatively new. Al- who strives to build green. The land footprint refers to
though there is no set definition, there appears to be the impact of development on once-natural areas—the
a growing consensus around many of the most visible amount of land consumed and how it is treated—while
features a green neighborhood should have. There is the carbon footprint represents the amount of fossil
even a new national program to certify neighborhoods fuels burned as part of daily life. “Smart growth focuses
as ecologically sound and energy-efficient. Yet at the on the land footprint and efficiency of resources. Green
same time, there is disagreement over how to make the neighborhoods marry that with concerns like tree pres-
neighborhoods sustainable over generations, and what ervation, storm-water management, energy-efficient
green really means. heating and cooling equipment…it’s taking smart
Green versus smart growth to the next level, adding another layer.”
Experts interviewed for this article were unanimous Others suggest that building green neighborhoods
on one point: collecting green-certified houses into a means following the old environmental mantra: Re-
conventional subdivision on a former farm field at the duce. Reuse. Recycle. Reduce the land consumed, the
edge of the metro area would not a green neighborhood miles traveled by car and the consumption of energy.
make. Beyond that, there was little unanimity. Reuse the buildings and infrastructure of existing neigh-
11
12. borhoods, use waste as a source of energy, and reuse generation after generation. Neighborhoods will always
“gray” water to maintain landscaping. Recycle building be regenerated to some degree over time, but the under-
materials, and even the land itself—the post-industrial lying “bones” must be excellent, or else the neighbor-
brownfields and fallow parking-lot “grayfields” around hood will fall into abandonment.
defunct shopping centers. The next most important criterion is that the neighbor-
Bert Gregory, president and CEO of Mithun, a Seattle- hood be “walkable,” says Doug Farr, a Chicago architect
based urban design firm that has made green develop- and principal author of the newly published book,
ment a focus of its practice, defines a green neigh- Sustainable Urbanism. “Being walkable means more than
The neighborhood has to be complete, with homes, stores and schools
in the right balance so that you have a critical mass of destinations to
walk to and enough families nearby to make them viable.
Photo by Rick Keating
The Jim Wiley Community Center is a key piece in the Greenbridge redevelopment effort The Greenbridge Green drain demon-
near Seattle, Wa. Green features include a cupola which regulates air flow and ventilation, a strates how gravity moves from the roof
hydronic heat system, solar panels and a number of energy and water efficiency features. tops to a clean drain system that helps
protect Puget Sound.
borhood with this thumbnail sketch: “It is compact, merely having the facilities for walking. The neighbor-
complete, connected and uses resources wisely. It needs hood has to be complete, with homes, stores and schools
to be appropriately located, respectful of environmental in the right balance so that you have a critical mass of
conditions and connected to a transportation system destinations to walk to and enough families nearby to
that allows for a mix of travel options.” make them viable.”
Excellent human habitat Why is walkability so critical? “Fish swim, humans walk.
Green neighborhoods, first and foremost, should shine There can be no more primary activity that benefits
as examples of highly-valued human habitat, Gregory people more than walking. … And it’s eco-effective.”
says. Only those places that meet the timeless needs and Designing a neighborhood with the intention of provid-
desires of human beings will succeed in the marketplace ing a safe, inviting way to walk to many daily activities
12 ON COMMON GROUND
13. automatically reduces both the land and carbon foot- Green neighborhoods should
prints, putting more destinations within a smaller geo-
graphic area so that residents use less energy getting to shine as examples of highly-
and fro. At the same time, complete streets—designed valued human habitat.
to accommodate cars but also to make walking and bik-
ing inviting and free of hazard—draw more people. This
amounts to more “eyes on the street,” making the area
safer from crime, Farr says.
The third principle, a corollary to being walkable, is
high-quality public transportation. That means a com-
prehensive transit network that connects residents of the
green neighborhood to the broader region, providing
access to the jobs and cultural opportunities that cannot
be contained within a single neighborhood. Such a sys-
tem also provides a hedge against oil dependence.
“The future is not certain and $10 gallon gas could be
five years away or 20 years away,” Farr says. “It is not fair
to give families no other choice but to accept whatever
hit to the budget the oil companies demand.” Some
green neighborhoods might take the form of “transit-
Photo by Rick Keating
The Greenbridge development project incorporated art in several different ways throughout the community while
maintaining greener principles.
Photo by Rick Keating
SUMMER 2008 13
14. oriented development,” or TOD—dense housing and of infrastructure. (For more on green infrastructure, see
commercial nodes built around a high-capacity transit story on page 18.)
station, usually rail. Other green neighborhoods might “Links to nature should be in every neighborhood,” adds
be built farther away from a high-volume transit line Farr. “One way to think about it is, how far would you have
and connect to that larger system via bus and streetcar. to drive your kids to go play with frogs in a stream?”
Literally green Walter Brown is senior vice president for development
Green neighborhoods should be literally green, Gregory and environmental affairs at Atlanta-based Green Street
says. There should be tree-lined streets, planting strips, Properties. Providing adequate greenery in a dense ur-
pocket parks, forest preserves, community gardens, ban setting presents a thorny design challenge, he says,
rooftop gardens and more. Aspects of a natural environ-
ment take the edge off of urban life in myriad ways, and
provide important ecological services. “Even the highest
density environments—especially the highest density
environments—should take advantage of natural sys-
tems’ ability to process stormwater, to absorb carbon,
or to curb the heat island effect,” says Gregory. This
“green infrastructure” is as critical to long-term health
of a neighborhood, city and region as every other kind
Aspects of a natural environment
take the edge off of urban life in
myriad ways, and provide impor-
tant ecological services.
Residents of Glenwood
Park gather together to
celebrate the grand open-
ing of the community.
14 ON COMMON GROUND
15. We created a central green that
collects all the rainwater and
cleans it naturally, and gives each
person a larger park and a place
to play.
but not an insurmountable one. When his company
built Glenwood Park, a green, new urbanist neighbor-
hood on recycled industrial land in the city of Atlanta,
they were able to find a single solution to storm-water
runoff and green-space needs.
“Our houses have small yards and not a lot of green which has been adopted with gusto by a growing number
around each building, but we created a central green of architects, developers and local governments. Now, the
that collects all the rainwater and cleans it naturally, Green Building Council is applying a similar set of stan-
and gives each person a larger park and a place to play dards to green neighborhoods in a pilot program called
that exceeds what they could do on their individual lot.” LEED for Neighborhood Developments.
There can be other bonuses to smaller private lots as LEED-ND, as it is known, was developed in conjunc-
well. “The remnant green that people have gets more tion with the Congress for the New Urbanism and the
intensive attention. People make beautiful spaces, much Natural Resources Defense Council, with participation
more interesting than the quarter-acre backyard,” the from many other organizations. The rating system applies
taming of which often means still greater carbon emis- a three-tiered screen to development projects, evaluating
sions, as well as lawn chemicals. them by “location and linkage,” “neighborhood pattern
LEED for neighborhoods and design” and “green construction and technology.”
Over the last several years the U.S. Green Building Coun- Within those areas projects may win credits for compact
cil has administered the LEED certification program for development, affordable housing, reuse of historic build-
the environmental performance of individual buildings, ings, reduced parking footprint, solar orientation, prox-
SUMMER 2008 15
16. heavily represented—green neighborhoods are expected
to play a strong role in that state’s ambitious plan to
reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
Yet another element: Social sustainability
While LEED-ND awards credits for the inclusion of
affordable housing, accessibility to people of all income
levels is not a prerequisite for certification. That omis-
sion could encourage neighborhoods that are “green”
but less than sustainable, especially if they end up being
exclusive, says Stephen Norman, executive director of
the King County Housing Authority in Seattle.
“Genuine sustainability will require social sustainability
Genuine sustainability will require as well as environmental sustainability,” Norman said.
“We’ve learned from hard experience that if people are
social sustainability as well as en-
isolated in concentrations of poverty or excluded from
vironmental sustainability. living where there are jobs and educational opportuni-
ties, the bricks and mortar don’t survive.” Norman’s
imity to housing and jobs, and a host of other features. All agency is trying to create spaces that are both green
told, LEED-ND has nine required benchmarks and 49 and inclusive. One example is Greenbridge, a former
possible categories in which to earn credits toward silver, housing project that has been redeveloped into a mixed-
gold or platinum certification. According to the Green income eco-village with shops, a school, and transporta-
Building Council, “LEED certification provides inde- tion to a key commercial corridor.
pendent, third-party verification that a development’s Achieving the level of sustainability Norman envisions is
location and design meet accepted high levels of environ- the ultimate goal, says Brown, but it will require public/
mentally responsible, sustainable development.” private partnerships. “It’s a continuum. There are so
The 200-plus projects accepted into the pilot phase many layers you can address: affordability, life cycle of
come from 39 states and six countries. California is the buildings and the inhabitants, reuse over time. With
16 ON COMMON GROUND
17. Glenwood Park, we were trying to address as many as we Will that pitch work? In many places it’s already work-
conceivably could.” ing, says Brown. “I used to think, I’m going to do green
Will people buy it? because I want to do it,” adding that he did expect to
In the U.S., few innovations succeed unless they can receive some positive attention from both the public
thrive in the marketplace. Green neighborhoods are no and the regulatory community. “But more and more,
exception, Farr acknowledges. “If you’re a REALTOR® green is ‘in,’ and I do think there is a large and growing
and you’re trying to sell a green neighborhood, you’re market. In the market I want to work with, the creative
making a very different pitch from what we’re used to. types, it is very important. It’s almost more of a question
It’s not granite countertops, or larger closets. It’s talking of, if you don’t do it, what section of the market are you
about a place of choices. You want to stay home and losing? And that’s only going to grow in the future.” ●
work, there’s stuff to do. If you want to age in peace David A. Goldberg is the communications director
and don’t want to mow your lawn, there’s a place you for Smart Growth America, a nationwide coalition
can move to. If you’re just starting out and don’t want based in Washington, D.C. that advocates for land-
use policy reform. In 2002, Mr. Goldberg was award-
to spend your money on a car, you can use a shared car ed a Loeb Fellowship at Harvard University, where he
and transit, or walk.” studied urban policy.
Glenwood Park will plant more than 1,000 trees and thousands of other plants, flowers and shrubs creating shade
and beauty for residents, while also significantly reducing heat island effects.
SUMMER 2008 17
18. GREEN INFRASTRUCTURE “Infrastructure: the substructure or underlying foundation…on which
the continuance and growth of a community or state depends.”
– Webster’s New World Dictionary
By Brad Broberg
F
reeways and forests. Bridges and bogs. delivering essential eco-services—a.k.a. green infrastruc-
Power lines and pastures. ture—demands a far more strategic approach than saving
Gray or green, it’s all infrastructure—at least a wetland here or preserving woodlands there, he said.
that’s the mindset of a growing segment of McMahon ought to know. As co-author (with Mark Bene-
the planning community, from Alaska to dict) of Green Infrastructure: Linking Landscapes and Commu-
South Carolina. nities, he literally wrote the book on green infrastructure.
Think about it, said Ed McMahon, senior resident While there’s more than one take on green infrastruc-
fellow for sustainable development at the Urban Land ture—many people use the term to describe engineered
Institute. If infrastructure is what society counts on systems such as green roofs, porous pavement and rain
to provide essential services, why shouldn’t the green gardens—McMahon considers planning and conserva-
stuff—trees that scrub the air, streams that filter runoff, tion to be the movement’s meat and potatoes.
fields that produce food—be mentioned in the same His formal definition: an interconnected network of open
breath as the gray stuff? space that conserves natural ecosystem values and func-
Don’t get McMahon wrong. By and large, trees, streams tions, and provides associated benefits to human popula-
and fields are part of most conversations about planning tions. His informal definition: smart conservation.
and development—just not for the right reason. Defined that way, green infrastructure becomes a power-
Most people appreciate the beauty and the recreational val- ful engine for smart growth, providing a framework for
ue of open space. What they fail to recognize, said McMa- planners to decide where growth should occur by first
hon, is the nuts-and-bolts role open space plays in everyday deciding—in a very strategic way—where it shouldn’t,
life, and the need to plan for it with as much foresight as said McMahon. Curbing sprawl, encouraging clustered
when laying out streets, sewers or power lines. development and limiting the need to build gray infra-
“It’s underpinning our society the same way as a road,” structure are just some of the smart growth goals that
he said. “It isn’t just an amenity. It’s a necessity.” green infrastructure supports.
Does that distinction really matter? McMahon believes An example of green infrastructure in action is the El Paso
it does. Ensuring that the environment can continue Open Space Plan. By looking at the community’s green
18 ON COMMON GROUND SUMMER 2008
19. concept, people get the, ‘Ah ha,’ moment,” he said. “I
think it has helped push things forward.”
Smart growth and green infrastructure are “two sides of
the same coin,” writes McMahon in “Green Infrastruc-
ture: Smart Conservation for the 21st Century,” a paper
he co-authored with Benedict. As communities strive to
make better use of existing infrastructure and encourage
more compact, walkable, mixed-use development, green
infrastructure is precisely the right tool to shape where
growth will go, writes McMahon.
Besides being smart, green infrastructure can increase
the desirability of surrounding land. “There’s proof on
the ground that smart growth and green infrastructure can
sell real estate and make better communities,” said Bill Kre-
New York City is familiar with the benefits
successful green infrastructure provides.
spaces through the lens of green infrastructure, El Paso
was better able to identify areas that ought to be left un-
disturbed as well as areas more suitable for development.
Another example is New York City’s approach to upgrad-
ing its water treatment plants. Instead of spending $6-$8
billion to build new plants intended to meet future re-
quirements of the Safe Drinking Water Act, the city spent
$1.5 billion to buy land in the Catskills and protect the
watershed from degradation in the first place.
Although the green infrastructure argument challenges
conventional planning practices, it is proving to be an
effective way to address issues of growth and conser-
vation in harmony, said McMahon. “When you can
identify a lot of things and solidify them around one
Ensuring that the environment
can continue delivering essen-
tial eco-services demands a
strategic approach.
19
20. ager, a principal at Mithun, a Seattle architecture, design In many ways, Maryland was well ahead of the curve
and planning firm that specializes in green projects. with long-standing open space and farmland preserva-
Green infrastructure may be a relatively new term, but tion programs. But the land was being preserved with
it’s not a novel concept. Landscape architect Frederick little consideration of its contribution to the overall eco-
Law Olmstead designed networks of connected parks system. “We couldn’t say we were spending the money
100 years ago. And wildlife biologists have long known strategically,” said Bill Jenkins.
that linking parks and preserves with natural corri- Jenkins, now with the Environmental Protection Agen-
dors—or habitat highways—is the best way to protect cy, was in charge of landscape and watershed analysis
native plants and animals. with the Maryland Department of Natural Resources
Still, it wasn’t until the mid-1990s that the term green when the state decided to rethink its conservation ef-
infrastructure emerged as part of statewide planning forts. “What we wanted to do was identify areas of the
efforts in Florida—the Florida Statewide Greenways state worth preserving, from an ecosystem perspective,”
System—and Maryland—the GreenPrint program. he said.
Maryland followed what has become the template for
green infrastructure planning. First, it identified green
hubs—sweeping areas hundreds of acres in size and vital to
maintaining the state’s ecology. Then it connected the green
hubs with green links—ribbons of land such as stream val-
leys and ridge lines that function as habitat highways.
Today, the GreenPrint program steers public and private
preservation efforts toward a system of hubs and links
that support essential eco-services in ways that isolated
fragments cannot. It’s all about the whole being great-
er—and greener—than the sum of its parts.
Green infrastructure is an effective
way to address issues of growth and
conservation in harmony.
20 ON COMMON GROUND
21. Green infrastructure is open
space that is working for you—
it’s providing essential services.
The 30,000-acre Kettle Moraine State Park features
woodlands and prairies—one of the largest open spaces
in the Chicago area.
“Green infrastructure is open space, but think of it as
open space that is working for you,” said Jenkins. “It is
providing you with essential services. That’s where the
term infrastructure helps.”
Chicago Wilderness, a public/private consortium working
to protect natural ecosystems in the Chicago region, devel-
oped a Green Infrastructure Vision that identified 1.8 mil-
lion acres as resource protection areas. The nearly 2 million
acres are within a 6 million-acre band that stretches across
three states—Illinois, Indiana and Wisconsin.
The resulting map provides a blueprint for connecting
and conserving the large areas—500 acres and up—that
represent the region’s remaining green infrastructure,
said Dennis Dreher, a planner and engineer who was
the project manager.
What’s not on the agenda is stopping all development
throughout the entire 1.8 million acres, Dreher added.
More than 360,000 of those acres are already protected
as natural public lands. The Green Infrastructure Vision
identifies opportunities to add to and tie together those
areas, while also recognizing that development will oc-
cur in and around them.
The vision suggests specific protection strategies for each
area that includes accommodating growth where growth
is inevitable. Take the 30,000-acre Kettle Moraine in
SUMMER 2008 21
22. Wisconsin. Featuring woodlands, savannas, wetlands the capper is that all of the open space is adjacent to a
and prairies, it represents one of the largest open spaces 2,500-acre preserve, making it part of a larger function-
in the Chicago region. ing ecosystem.
While many parts of the Kettle Moraine are already Unlike GreenPrint in Maryland, the Green Infrastruc-
protected, the Green Infrastructure Vision recommends ture Vision developed by Chicago Wilderness is not tied
protecting additional areas through acquisition, con- to any state or county conservation programs. Instead,
servation easements and conservation development—a it relies on local and regional decision-makers to weave
way of regulating development that allows growth while the vision into their planning and conservation efforts.
at the same time protecting important natural features. According to Dreher, Chicago Wilderness currently is
What does conservation development look like? Prai- working with the seven-county Chicago Metropolitan
rie Crossing is a 362-home conservation development Agency for Planning to incorporate green infrastructure
northwest of Chicago. The homes are located on a small into a new regional plan.
portion of the site’s 667 acres, leaving 350 acres of open The same scenario is unfolding on a smaller scale in
space. That’s a step toward green infrastructure, but South Carolina, where the Central Midlands Council of
Governments (CMCOG) published Keeping It Green
In and around Chicago, area residents work together to
manage and conserve green areas.
Natural green
infrastructure is a lot
cheaper than build-
ing gray infrastructure.
22 ON COMMON GROUND
23. in the Midlands, a green infrastructure vision for a four-
county region.
When Joe Ryan was asked to lead the project, the senior
planner said, “Great. What’s green infrastructure?”
“It took me a while to get my head around it,” he recalled.
Since publishing an initial report and map introducing
the concept, Ryan is sold on the green infrastructure ap-
Green infrastructure and land-use planning:
proach to conservation and planning. “It certainly does
• Ensures that both green space and development are
make sense,” he said.
placed where most needed and appropriate.
Now it’s a matter of bringing local decision-makers on
• Identifies vital ecological areas and linkages prior to
board. “The horse has left the barn,” Ryan said. “If we don’t
development in suburban and rural landscapes.
do something now, it will be too late in 10 or 20 years.”
• Identifies opportunities for the restoration and
The timeframe may not be quite as tight in Alaska, but
enhancement of naturally functioning systems in
the Matanuska-Susitna Borough—a county the size
already developed areas.
of West Virginia—isn’t taking any chances. Located
northeast of Anchorage, the borough is working on a • Enables communities to create a vision that is greater
plan that will identify exactly where green infrastructure than the sum of its parts.
needs to be preserved, said Frankie Barker, an environ- • Enables conservation and development to be planned
mental planner with the borough. in harmony, not in opposition to each other.
Although vast tracts are protected by the state and fed- From: “Green Infrastructure: Smart Conservation for the
eral governments, local conservation efforts have lagged 21st Century,” by Mark Benedict and Ed McMahon.
and linkages are not well protected—hence the need for
a green infrastructure plan, said Barker.
Brad Broberg is a Seattle-based freelance writer spe-
“We’re very fortunate that we still have most of our natu- cializing in business and development issues. His work
ral green infrastructure,” Barker said. “If we can keep it, appears regularly in the Puget Sound Business Journal
it’s a lot cheaper than building gray infrastructure.” ● and the Seattle Daily Journal of Commerce.
SUMMER 2008 23
24. Marketing a
Sustainable Future
REALTORS ® Connect Buyers
with Energy Saving Homes.
By Steve Wright
Norris said even if gasoline spirals above five dollars a
W
ith soaring energy prices and
shrinking pocketbooks abound- gallon and the price of heating/cooling energy contin-
ing, sustainability can have a ues to skyrocket, homeowners won’t go broke—they’ll
different meaning to every dif- simply learn to adapt.
ferent person—ranging from the “Spray foam insulation, energy-efficient windows, solar
simplistic to the transcendental. energy, tankless water heaters, energy-star appliances
Whether sustainability means checking for energy leaks and high-efficiency HVAC systems are available to own-
around that craggy old front door, or adopting practices ers of new homes as well as old homes. The combination
to safeguard the planet far into the next centuries for of these technologies permits us to create zero energy
future generations, REALTORS® across the nation are homes,” he said. “The big change will not come from
taking major steps to help their clients go “green.” self-interest in the seventh generation, it will come from
an economic self interest.”
REALTOR® Nathan Norris—director of marketing and
design for The Waters, a new urbanist community on Alexandria, Virginia REALTOR® Candace Lightner,
the fringe of Montgomery, Ala.—believes in a holistic a world-renowned opinion leader who responded to
approach to sustainability. a family tragedy by founding Mothers Against Drunk
Driving (MADD), is now at the forefront of helping
“In our development, we regularly sell people on the
buyers become more energy efficient.
value of high-efficiency windows, spray foam insula-
tion, metal roofs and tankless water heaters,” he said. The sales associate with Coldwell Banker Residential
“High-efficiency HVAC systems have been harder [to Brokerage gives each buyer a free home energy audit, a
sell]—nonetheless, 20 percent of our first 100 homes process valued at $350.
had geo-thermal heating and cooling.” “I was trying to think of ways that would set me apart from
“Essentially, our clientele look at the long-term ramifica- other REALTORS®,” she said. “I discussed the concept of
tions of their decisions. We did an energy audit on the an energy audit and told my buyers if they waited until the
first two years of utility bills and we used the conclusions close of escrow, it would be my gift to them.”
drawn from that analysis to educate prospective buyers The audit takes about two and a half hours and focuses
on the items they should include in their homes.” on identifying major energy leaks in a house. Techni-
Norris believes that sustainability includes energy effi- cians measure everything from gaps around doors and
ciency within a house’s walls plus a walkable, traditional windows to whether insulation has been properly in-
neighborhood development. stalled in attics, basements and crawl spaces.
“To me, sustainability means doing things that make The homeowner receives a report that identifies prob-
sense over the long run,” he said. “In 1998, I first heard lems and explains how to fix them.
of the Native American principle that we owe a duty to “Most people here are doing remodeling,” said Light-
ensure the survival of the seventh generation beyond us. ner, who worked on an efficiency project with the U.S.
It was wise a long time ago, and it still is today.” Department of Energy and started addressing problems
24 ON COMMON GROUND SUMMER 2008
25. Sustainability means doing things
REALTOR® Mike Kiefer , Certified EcoBroker®, evaluates
that make sense over the long run. homes for energy efficiency.
in her own 60-plus-year-old house in old Alexandria. “If portunity for REALTORS® to sharpen their focus and
you plan on being in the home a number of years and if add to the crucial information they supply to clients.
you’re already remodeling, you can do a retrofit to boost “Most consumers are qualified based upon credit and are
energy efficiency.” given a picture of PITI as part of owning. But from my
Lightner said when going green, it’s best to speak in experience, I know of very few REALTORS® that ever
plain English. mention the costs of utilities or home maintenance,”
“We’re doing REALTOR® roundtable discussions he said. “Even though utility bills are a reflection of
around the country and most REALTORS® are some- lifestyle use, I think it would ultimately be useful for
what aware of the issue of green or energy efficiency and consumers/homebuyers to be able to review utility bills
they are interested in it, but they don’t know what to do before placing an offer on a home. It is very important
next,” she said. “We asked ‘how many of your clients for consumers, when working with a REALTOR®, to
are interested in energy efficiency?’ and no hands go up. ask about such matters and request copies. As you can
Then we ask ‘how many are concerned about utility imagine, when that first month rolls around and the gas/
bills?’ and the hands go up—the light bulb goes on.” electric/water bills start rolling in—you begin to realize
that owning a home is so much more than PITI.”
Instead of talking about sustainability and hard sci-
ence, Lightner suggests REALTORS® talk to consumers To reduce automobile dependency, Green DC Re-
about making homes healthier and safer, as well as more alty gives its clients a Zipcar membership and mileage
comfortable, cost effective and durable. voucher. Zipcar members can rent automobiles by the
day or hour from many urban locations. Zipcar supple-
“Green sounds too far out there,” she said. “Energy effi- ments public transit with individual automobiles avail-
cient is more interesting, more something you can touch.” able for a fraction of the cost of car payment, mainte-
REALTOR® Michael Kiefer—founder and principal of nance, insurance and fuel.
Green DC Realty, an affiliate of Keller Williams Realty “I look at efficiency as being more than just the home. It’s
Capital Properties in the Washington D.C.-Maryland about evaluating the consumer’s current life and seeing
area—said sustainability requires buyers to look at a where cost effective, efficient improvements can be made,”
bigger picture. he said. “In the Metro area, we have ride-sharing firms that
“I believe we are in an era when we will see oil rise to take the hassle out of owning a car. I continually look at
$200 a barrel in the near future,” he observed. “I think ways of providing home ownership through the removal of
part of the problem I am seeing is that the consumer is inefficient expenditures and proving incentives to the con-
not entirely sure where to start. Purchasing a home for sumer through [Zipcar] vouchers as part of the purchase.”
many is a challenging matter filled with lots of anxiety San Francisco, known as a hotbed of progressive think-
and since for many it is their first home, they have not ing and acting for nearly a half century, actually has a
been trained to think about what I refer to as the exter- fairly small inventory of green houses.
nal costs of owning a home.”
REALTOR® Chris Bartle, president and broker of Green
Kiefer said the shrinking energy supply and rising cost Key Real Estate, aims to boost the number of green
doesn’t have to be all doom and gloom—it can be an op- homes in the City by the Bay as well as nationwide.
25
26. REALTOR® Tricia Jumonville get calls from buyers who have an allergy to formalde-
is known as the Texas “agent hyde or a certain pesticide. Now there are a lot of new
with the horse sense,” helping
clients with both urban and
products that don’t give off any harmful emissions.”
rural properties. Bartle’s brokerage recruits highly educated people from
a diverse background and makes sure all of them get
EcoBroker® training. EcoBroker® is an on-line training
course that allows REALTORS® to attain green certi-
fication. (For more information on EcoBroker®, please
see the story “Seeking Green” on page 28 in this issue.)
“We’re certified green-building specialists—we want our
agents to be greenest of the green. We’re in classes learning
from architects and builders,” he said. “We’re also very in-
terested in teaching buyers how to green their homes. We
look at green as being equivalent to high-end property.”
“REALTORS® have great influence on the spending
patterns of their clients. The greening of houses has only
been going on a few years. To introduce best practices to
our buyers, we need more data,” said Bartle, whose firm
gives buyers a certificate for a home energy efficiency
and air quality analysis worth $250.
That’s not a hard sell—you make a Bartle, whose mission is to make San Francisco the most
sustainable city in the world, will soon open branches
$10,000 investment now and make of Green Key Real Estate in other parts of Northern
it back in five or 10 years. California as well as Seattle, Portland, Ore. and Boulder,
Colo. The ultimate goal is to sell Green Key franchises
“We’re a mission-driven company. Of course we’re about to like-minded brokers across the United States.
selling houses and making money, but we’re also about
Janet Rosenberg, a REALTOR® with Intero Real Estate
increasing the inventory of green homes,” he said.
Services in Santa Cruz, Ca., lists her EcoBroker® certi-
Bartle’s firm works with Build It Green, a California fication when signing her e-mails—before the essential
nonprofit, to promote green building and green remod- office, mobile and fax numbers.
eling. He also notes that the California Association of
“REALTORS® are in the perfect position to educate
REALTORS® has a Green Task Force to raise member
people, and entire communities for that matter, on how
awareness on environmental issues, green the associa-
to make homes more energy efficient,” she said. “The
tion’s business practices, and create alliances with other
reason for this is that in our profession we are talking to
organizations on green issues.
homebuyers and home sellers every day, and we’re also
“In an old home, if the client is concerned about energy touring homes regularly. With our background as Certi-
efficiency, the solution includes double-paned windows fied EcoBrokers®, Intero Real Estate can offer not only
and energy-efficient appliances. That’s not a hard sell— suggestions on ways to improve a home’s efficiency, but
you make a $10,000 investment now and make it back ways to reduce utility bills.”
in five or 10 years,” Bartle explained.
Rosenberg integrated her EcoBroker® training into her two
Bartle said sustainable housing goes far beyond a capital offices by forming a green business network called Green
investment in energy efficiency. Performance Network (GPN). The network includes ap-
“People are thinking about indoor air quality, people are praisers, builders, inspectors, landscapers, material suppliers,
thinking of their families,” he said. “A lot of building lenders and other professionals who have gone green.
materials, finish materials, paints, varnish, sealers and “I found that I wanted to refer my clients to local busi-
cabinetry with particle board held together with formal- nesses that offered green products and services, and I
dehyde—have toxic elements. That’s not just a horrible needed to know who those folks were,” she said. She
paint smell, it’s a chemical that isn’t good for you. We offers GPN members a free half-page ad in the GPN di-
26 ON COMMON GROUND
27. REALTORS® are in the perfect position to educate people
on how to make homes more energy efficient.
one of each locally to add to my team of home inspectors,
mortgage lenders, contractors and others to serve clients.”
rectory, which is distributed to clients and in businesses To delve more deeply into holistic sustainability, Ju-
throughout Santa Cruz. monville suggests REALTORS® pick up a copy of
“This makes my company very visible in the ‘green’ architect Christopher Alexander’s A Pattern Language.
front, and it builds a referral network back to us.” The groundbreaking 1977 book, in its own words, deals
with “the large-scale structure of the environment: the
Every six weeks, Rosenberg hosts public events that in-
growth of town and country, the layout of roads and
vite community members to introduce themselves and
paths, the relationship between work and family, the
tell about their product or service. Everyone passes out
formation of suitable public institutions for a neigh-
business cards.
borhood, the kinds of public space required to support
“Obviously, I hope that when people are making a deci- these institutions.”
sion about Real Estate, they will come to Intero Real
Jumonville, whose e-mail includes a picture of herself
Estate Services for help,” she said. “Additionally, we
with her horse, notes that sustainability reaches beyond
teach Intero Community Classes in my office—taught
the urban core and suburbs.
by EcoBrokers® and open to the public. The classes
cover topics such as ‘Sustainable Building Showcase’ “I’m working not only on urban issues but rural issues—
and ‘Green Living Seminar.’” how to make your horse property more environmentally
sustainable. For example, it’s just as important to site the
For REALTOR® Tricia Jumonville, a self described “old
barn correctly on the property as it is the house. Rain-
hippie,” sustainability has been woven into her life as far
water harvesting for livestock watering is a no-brainer
back as she can remember.
and using soil biology versus fertilizer/weedkiller is more
“An astute REALTOR® can always help a buyer or seller sustainable long term,” she said. “I’m constantly looking
find affordable ways to add to the sustainability factor for rebates and other benefits that the utility companies
of more traditional construction,” said Jumonville, who and city, state and federal government offer for clients
works for ERA Colonial Real Estate in rural Texas about interested in upgrading their new or existing home to
a long hour’s drive out of progressive Austin. “You can’t more sustainable standards.” ●
change the way an existing building is placed on the
lot, for example, but you can add rainwater harvesting ADDITIONAL RESOURCES:
systems, solar attributes, screening that helps with the www.thewatersal.com
energy demands for cooling, landscaping to decrease www.cbmove.com/candace.lightner
energy usage and quite a few other affordable after- www.greendcrealty.com
market tweaks that will increase sustainability of even www.greenkeyrealestate.com
traditional construction.” www.interorealestate.com
“Clearly, energy auditors are going to be an important www.TexasHorseAndHome.com
partner in the real estate professional’s life in the future.
Wright frequently writes about smart growth and
As will lenders familiar with the energy-efficient loans that
sustainable communities. He and his wife live in a re-
are available and make sustainability more affordable for stored historic home in the heart of Miami’s Little Ha-
the average person,” she added. “I’m currently looking for vana. Contact him at: stevewright64@yahoo.com
SUMMER 2008 27
28. SEEKING GREEN
REALTOR® Associations provide a
helping hand to achieve sustainability.
By Steve Wright
N
Rainwater harvesting ot that long ago, if a buyer asked a
is one of the many REALTOR® to search for a green
environmental house, it could have meant only
practices members two things—the shade of paint, or a
of Seattle’s TREC
promote. glassed in structure perfect for grow-
ing flowers and vegetables.
Now green means environmentally-friendly, energy-ef-
ficient, healthy and sustainable.
And, as more and more buyers are seeking homes with
everything from better air quality and insulation to solar
power and rain catch basins, REALTORS® are recognizing
Consumer demand for sustainability the need to be knowledgeable about going “green,” as a way
has also prompted companies to to grow both their client base and sales commissions.
To separate the junk science from best practices, a num-
create coursework and certification ber of large regional REALTOR® Associations are creat-
programs for REALTORS®. ing green councils, trainings, conferences, certification
procedures and partnerships.
Consumer demand for sustainability has also prompted
companies to create coursework and certification pro-
grams for REALTORS®.
“We have developed a brochure, Green Living: A
Resource Guide for Residents of King County,” said
Russell Hokanson, CEO of the Seattle King County
Association of REALTORS® (SKCAR). The brochure
is available on SKCAR’s Web site, and members are en-
couraged to provide a copy to new homeowners. “The
brochure provides valuable information and resources
relating to energy efficiency inside and outside of homes,
improving vehicle fuel economy, recycling, calculating
carbon footprints and other valuable green tips.”
Members of Seattle’s TREC take a day to plant trees in the SKCAR partners with a local instructor to offer a class-
Hylebos Wetlands. room course—Green Cities & Housing. It also is col-
laborating with the Independent Brokers Association to
offer a new course—Selling Green Homes.
28 ON COMMON GROUND SUMMER 2008
29. EcoBroker® Inter-
national team in
Evergreen, Colo.
Front row left to
right: Kyndal Lee,
Vicki Rosa, Linda
Besler, Jennifer
Shank, Kim Young.
Back row left to right:
John Beldock, Ryan
Moehring, Mark
Gashler, John Stovall
“Our association lobbies state and local officials for jobs- “The project at the Hylebos (a watershed conserva-
housing balance. Recognizing that one-half of all green- tion area) was the first such project to be undertaken
house gas (GHG) comes from transportation, one of the by TREC…[Hylebos] is one of the outstanding envi-
best approaches to address climate change is to lobby for ronmental assets in the entire Pacific Northwest and
jobs-housing balance. This concept advocates for hous- the Friends of the Hylebos, with whom we partnered
ing opportunities near employment centers.” Hokanson on this project, have a superb reputation for their en-
said of the necessity to combine smart growth with vironmental remediation and enhancement efforts.
green housing: “Jobs-housing balance helps prevent The REALTORS® would not be content to only
sprawl, provides housing opportunities for workers near talk about the environment and raise funds for en-
their jobs and greatly reduces the vehicle miles traveled vironmental projects, as some environmental efforts
and GHG.” have done…As part of our local board’s centennial
SKCAR conceived and created The REALTORS® En- celebration, this fall TREC will work on the ground
vironmental Council (TREC), an organization pending or provide environmental stewardship to improve a
nonprofit status that Hokanson believes is the first of its significant greenbelt or park within King County.”
kind in the nation. In his words, TREC was created to: (3) Enhance REALTOR® understanding of environ-
(1) Improve the congruence between public perceptions mental issues, particularly as they relate to regula-
and the fact that the REALTORS® are sensitive to, tion, conservation, enhancement and remediation
and supportive of, well-grounded and responsible that affect the sustainability, utilization and develop-
environmental stewardship. ment of real property.
“Many folks don’t know that the REALTORS® are “This is being accomplished through state-approved
a founding member of the Washington Wildlife and clock-hour classes REALTORS® must complete in
Recreation Coalition and for many, many years have order to renew their real estate licenses.”
annually contributed thousands of dollars to the (4) Develop and provide to REALTORS® brandable
Coalition’s efforts to secure environmental and rec- point-of-sale brochures that members can download
reation project funding for jurisdictions throughout and use with clients and customers.
Washington State.
“For instance, ‘How To Be An Earth-Friendly Ho-
The TREC is a natural fit with our strong support meowner,’ [which can] be downloaded from the
for schools, infrastructure and housing, which—like SKCAR Web site at http://www.nwrealtor.com/
a quality environment—are all prerequisites for associations/1563/files/TREC.cfm.”
quality of life.”
(5) Undertake the advancement of important environmen-
(2) Accomplish projects that provide on-the-ground tal policies, and/or environmental projects, that other
benefits for the environment. environmental organizations have failed to undertake.
29
30. Members of TREC learn ways to preserve and restore
the North Fork open space of the Hylebos Wetlands.
We wanted to help our members
understand that this is where the
market is going.
Hokanson also strongly believes that association • High-efficiency 90 AFUE furnaces.
boards should work to add green information to • Energy Star appliances.
their area Multiple Listing Service. Agents can high-
light green features for homes that meet third-party • Source of electrical power, including specific utility
certifications for Built Green®, Energy Star® and service and solar features.
LEED® (Leadership in Energy and Environmental • Additional home modifications, including sustainable
Design) standards. materials, water filters, rain collectors and solar tubes.
There are checkboxes for identifying energy-efficient When the RMLS rolled out green features for its list-
heating and cooling systems including solar and for ings in Oregon and Southwest Washington, it empha-
renewable floor coverings such as bamboo or cork. sized the industry-wide benefits:
In a listing’s details about the house lot, a REAL- • Homebuyers, 78 percent of whom say they would
TOR® can note sustainable features such as drought- choose one home over another based on its energy
resistant landscaping. efficiency, will be able to search for homes with lower
Recently, The Northwest Multiple Listing Service, energy costs and environmental impact. Four out of
the largest full-service MLS in the Pacific Northwest, five of the same homebuyers recognize the value of the
added information on sustainability to its database. Energy Star label and 67 percent of them recognize the
In Portland, Ore., the Regional Multiple Listing Earth Advantage brand.
Service (RMLS) introduced green listings to much • Home builders, nine of 10 saying they incorporate
fanfare in 2007. energy-saving products or features into new homes,
“Green and energy-efficient features have emerged will be able to differentiate themselves from the com-
as some of the most important and sought-after by petition at a time when the market is cooling. Accord-
buyers in our RMLS service area,” said RMLS CEO ing to a recent survey by the National Association of
Beth Murphy. “With the help of their REALTORS®, Home Builders (NAHB), 64 percent of home builders
homebuyers now will be able to pinpoint homes will either be heavily or moderately involved nation-
with those features.” ally in green building projects.
The RMLS forms include details such as: • Home sellers, who have invested money into energy-
• Home performance and green home certifications saving and sustainability features, can better promote
such as Energy Star®, Earth Advantage®, LEED for their home’s higher resale value.
Homes and others.
30 ON COMMON GROUND
31. • Real estate agents have new ways to better meet their • Energy efficiency technologies, sustainable energy op-
clients’ needs whether representing the buyer or seller. tions and mortgage options that award up to $15,000
Seventy-five percent of those consumers that have used worth of energy efficiency improvements for a home at
a REALTOR® in the past confirmed that they would the closing. Green home certification programs, such
turn to a “green” REALTOR® if there was a mecha- as Built Green® and Energy Star® Qualified Homes.
nism for searching and tracking homes built to energy • Energy and environmental training that can add value
efficient and green building measures. to transactions with consumers both green-minded
• Appraisers will grow in their ability to incorporate and not green-aware. Identifying new markets where
energy efficient and green home features into a home’s the EcoBroker® Designation will have appeal and im-
appraised value. pact, generating more business.
SKCAR is also an advocate of the EcoBroker® cer- EcoBroker® Vice President John K. Stovall was a fea-
tification program, developed by Dr. John Beldock, tured presenter at the Vermont Association of REAL-
former director of the U.S. Department of Energy’s TORS® (VAR) 2007 statewide convention, which
Environmental Analysis Program. focused on going green.
Beldock, currently president and CEO of EcoBro- Robert D. Hill, executive vice president of the VAR,
ker®, calls it “the first and only international provider said that, “when the Legislature spent the entire session
of green designation training that provides a unique last year on global warming and attempted to institute
energy and environmental curriculum to licensed real mandatory energy efficiency standards on all housing, it
estate professionals, leading to the EcoBroker® desig- was a natural opportunity to make sure our members are
nation.” conversant with the concepts and adequately prepared
There are certified EcoBrokers® in 42 states, four Ca- to respond to customers who are looking for green real
nadian Provinces and the Caribbean. Based in Ever- estate. We wanted to help our members understand that
green, Colo., outside Denver, EcoBroker®’s accredited this is where the market is going and not just a ‘nerdy
coursework consists of three six-hour on-line classes. idea,’ so they should be professionally primed to provide
Topics include: assistance when their clients ask.”
• Constructively addressing environmental issues such VAR has also worked with Smart Growth Vermont on
as radon, asbestos, lead, water, mold and indoor air a project to demonstrate that well-planned communi-
quality. Reducing liabilities and saving deals by learn- ties can fit the Vermont landscape. However, Hill said,
ing to work through environmental issues. acceptance of the concept is moving slowly due to strin-
REALTORS® can also be instrumental in showing clients how green
improvements can increase the value of their investment.
SUMMER 2008 31