I attendedGreenprints上个月,一个伟大的小区域绿色建筑会议南方能源研究所every year in Atlanta. It served its purpose well, bringing together for education and networking a wide range of industry professionals interested in sustainable building. There were three separate tracks: residential, commercial, and sustainable communities’ economy and policy, along with some additional workshops and post-conference training classes.
区域会议超过更大的国家事件之一,国家事件是能够在当地的气候问题上勉强关注。正如我之前所指出的那样,建立科学和能源效率通常具有北方焦点,留下了许多温和和温暖的人民在寒冷(双关语)中常常。而不是感觉局外人从其他人中过滤出呈现的气候相关部分,而参加者认为扬声器几乎迎合。
Nice change of pace for lunch presentation
My favorite session was the opening day lunch presentation. Luncheon talks are all too often a single speaker standing at a podium desperately trying to keep people’s attention while they eat, talk, and try hard not to nod off after their meal. This session was a casual conversation betweenAlex Wilson和John Straube., two leaders in green building and building science. They shared their somewhat random thoughts and answered questions from the audience. All presentations should be this entertaining and informative. I am anxiously awaiting the video of this event; hopefully it will be online shortly.
Here are some random comments from sessions I attended that I found amusing, informative, or both:
Doug Farrshowed a photograph of a LEED Platinum building “so green, you can eat the walls” that looked like it was “air dropped into a death zone for pedestrians.” Not really green. One choice quote: “We used to call bioswales ditches.”
A session on water conservation pointed out that we lose 1 trillion gallons of water annually to leaks.
Commuters going to and from work at an average office building use 30% more energy for transportation than the building uses for operations.
Over 30 years, a typical $175,000 house will use $75,000 worth of operating energy and $300,000 worth of transportation energy. Location, location, location.
My favorite quote of the entire event: John Straube called open combustion gas water heaters “faith-based ventilation.”
Behind the curve on posting video
While they haven’t yet posted any video from the sessions, several speakers’讲义are available online.
All in all, Greenprints was very worthwhile, as are most conferences. No expenses and no time for travel were just added bonuses. If you live in the Southeast, you should consider attending next spring.
One Comment
Another Straube quote
I think my favorite one was his description of how to do window flashing correctly: "Don't tuck your pants into your boots when it's raining."
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