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New Green Building Standard Could Help Encourage Low-E
Glass in Residential Structure
March 17, 2009
The development of the 2008 National Green Building Standard (ICC-700)
may help further promote the use of low-E glass. The standard is designed
to provide guidance for safe and sustainable building practices for high-rise
residential buildings as well as new and renovated single-family homes.
The standard's rating system allows architects/designers, builders and
communities to choose the levels of high-performance green buildings that
best suit their needs. For example, one key provision of the standard
is to offer energy performance starting at 15 percent above the baseline
requirements of the 2006 International Energy Conservation Code (IECC).
"Whether they use the performance option (whole home 15 percent above
the 2006 IECC) or the prescriptive path, the standard will reward lower
solar heat gain coefficients (SHGC) in the south, and lower U-value in
the north," says industry consultant Thomas D. Culp, Ph.D. "Both
will promote low-E in all regions, and possibly some triple glazing in
the north. There are also credits for sun-tempered design, passive cooling
design and passive solar heating design. These options reward builders
for good practices such as optimally orienting the building and glazing,
using higher SHGC in the south, using larger overhangs or other methods
of shading, placing operable windows for cross ventilation and using thermal
mass. These can give from three to 13 additional points in the energy
efficiency category, on top of points related to the basic window and
building energy performance."
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