OTHER
SHEAHAN
ENTERPRISES

JUNE 2008

VETERAN GREEN ARCHITECT
EDWARD MAZRIA
His “2030 Challenge” Calls For ‘Carbon Neutral’ Buildings

 

STORY BY MAUREEN TRAXLER

Who better to know the power of architects than one who is an architect? So, with environmental concerns about the rise in planet Earth’s temperature and the ebbing of fossil fuel resources, veteran green architect Edward Mazria says that the key to solving the global warming crisis lies in the hands of his peers.

A Lafayette High School (Brooklyn) grad who received a Bachelor of Architecture degree from Pratt Institute, Mazria has focused his career on energy-efficient design and sustainability since the 1970s, the time of the so-called first energy crisis. A pioneer in “environmental design,” he authored a book in 1979 titled The Passive Solar Energy Book, A Complete Guide to Passive Solar Home, Greenhouse and Building Design. His book, Mazria notes, is a “seminal reference on the fundamentals of solar design.”

Several years ago, at the urging of his young staff at Mazria, Inc., an architectural design firm he established in the late-1970s in Santa Fe, New Mexico, he began to take a closer look at the connections between environmental design and the growing problems of global warming and greenhouse gas emissions. His research showed that architecture, or the “built-environment,” demands the greatest use of energy and leaves a hefty carbon “footprint.” Mazria realized that architecture accounts for 48% of the total U.S. energy consumption.


Rio Grande Botanic Garden Conservatory, Albuquerque, New Mexico. Mazria, Inc., architect. Photo by Craig Campbell

“The Building Sector is the largest energy consumption and greenhouse gas emitting sector in the country and the world,” Mazria told Networking® magazine in a recent interview.

In response to his findings, Mazria established the nonprofit organization, Architecture 2030. Its goal is to achieve a dramatic reduction in the global-warming-causing greenhouses gas emissions of the Building Sector by changing the way buildings and developments are planned, designed and constructed. In 2006, Mazria issued his “2030 Challenge” to the men and women in his profession and the building industry, boldly calling for all new buildings and major renovations to reduce their fossil fuel/greenhouse gas emitting consumption by 50% by 2010, and by incrementally increasing those reductions so that all buildings become ‘carbon neutral’ by 2030.

In 2007, to engage students of architecture and their professors, Mazria launched his 2010 Imperative, a challenge and strategy for transforming design and design education.

New Sense of Responsibility
Through his traveling multimedia presentation and his white paper, “It’s the Architecture, Stupid!”, Mazria has been attempting to reach critical mass in the numbers of architects and others who realize that the world can lick global warming if efforts are focused by architects and the building industry. In addition to the American Institute of Architects (AIA), which adopted the Architecture 2030 initiative and its targets one month after they were announced, Mazria says the 2030 Challenge has been “adopted or endorsed by every major professional organization, the U.S. Conference of Mayors and the National Association of Counties,” as well as the US Green Building Council, Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED), the Environmental Protection Agency, Royal Architects Institute of Canada, International Council for Local Environmental Initiatives, and World Business Council for Sustainable Development. The AIA Board has also added a new canon to its Code of Ethics calling on architects to be environmentally responsible, and its Document B101-2007 includes language requiring architects to discuss environmentally responsible design approaches with their clients.

“The Federal government adopted the 2030 Challenge in its Energy Bill, which was passed into law and requires that all federal buildings must meet its targets,” says Mazria. [The Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007 was signed by President George W. Bush and became Public Law 110-140 on December 19, 2007.] He adds, “The U.S. Green Building Council is moving toward reissuing its LEED certification to incorporate the targets, and many architects in their practices have adopted the targets. The state of California is moving to implement it, as well as many cities. In general, it’s at the local level where most of the movement is happening.”

Local Praise for Mazria’s Work
Renewable Energy Long Island (RELI) Executive Director Gordian Raacke, who has heard Ed Mazria present his research and his 2030 Challenge, calls Mazria “an amazing architect and advocate.” He says that he was “wowed by his idea and concept,” adding, “if we want to tackle global warming and climate change we have to work with the building professions, which build those buildings that use so much energy.” In 2006 Raacke was selected as one of former Vice President Al Gore’s 1,000 worldwide “Climate Change Messengers,” and he attended The Climate Project’s United States training seminar conducted by Gore in Nashville, Tennessee. He has spent many hours bringing the message about global warming and its solutions to a wide range of audiences.

“We have a very short amount of time left, probably the next 10 years is our window of opportunity, to bring about some dramatic and radical changes in the way we build new buildings and retrofit existing buildings,” says Raacke. “Mazria and the 2030 Challenge give us a clear and direct road map to get to where we need to be going in the next couple of decades.”

Raacke believes Mazria’s 2030 Challenge targets—all new buildings and major renovations reducing fossil fuel consumption by 50% by 2010 and all buildings becoming ‘carbon neutral’ by 2030—are “doable,” and he adds, “it’s not even significantly more expensive than conventional building.” Raacke points to his own experience, building an energy-efficient home with his wife in the early 1990s. Even though technology wasn’t as advanced as it is today, he says that with research and good design he was able to reduce his home’s energy consumption by 70%. A number of years later when he added solar panels, he reduced his electric bills to virtually zero. “So, the Raacke family home is almost carbon neutral today,” he remarks. Raacke also points out that Mazria’s concept suggests that if smart energy-efficient design doesn’t achieve a builder’s or architect’s energy consumption goal, he or she always has the option to buy green energy, such as through LIPA’s Green Choice program, in order to reach that goal.


Sol y Sombra, Santa Fe, New Mexico. Mazria, Inc., architect
Photo by Kirk Gittings


Reaffirming Environmental Connections
Local architect Bill Chaleff, of Chaleff and Rogers in Water Mill, recalls that Mazria’s staff had asked him if he would talk to them about the “stuff” he did in the Seventies and Eighties and “pushed him to become involved again in promoting sustainable architecture.” Like Raacke, Chaleff designed and built his own energy-efficient home using recycled and composite materials, passive solar engineering principles, structural insulated panels and a smart in-floor heating system. His firm has built over 200 energy-efficient homes.

With a background as a university research professor, Mazria analyzed U.S. Energy Information Administration data, including charts and graphs showing world temperature, population growth, and oil and natural gas reserves, and noticed the correlation in the upward curves shown on the energy consumption and carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions charts. He looked at the annual energy consumption pie chart (seen on page 26) of the traditional four sectors, which showed industry consuming at 35%; transportation, 27%; residential, 21%, and commercial, 17%. (Most of the energy consumed is in the form of fossil fuels, which release the greenhouse gases CO2, methane and nitrous oxide, heating up the atmosphere and contributing to global warming.)

But Mazria believed that the distribution among the four traditional sectors didn’t show the real picture. He reorganized the energy consumption and CO2 emissions charts, defining what he called the “Building Sector” or “Architecture.” In addition, his professional knowledge and design experience told him that in order to build in a sustainable way, calculations of energy consumption must also include “embodied energy,” which is a measure of the total energy required to produce a particular material or building component and get it to the building site. By putting these pieces together, he says he made “a discovery that reinforced the work he and his associates were doing and made solving the problems a little more urgent.”

When he presented his finding that architecture is a major energy consumer and contributor to greenhouse gas emissions, his staff protested that architects don’t design all the buildings and pointed a finger at the building industry. To satisfy this response, Mazria consulted the AIA to determine how much of a hand architects have in overall building design. AIA statistics showed that 77% of all non-residential buildings, along with 70% of all multifamily and 25% of all single-family construction, are designed by architects.

“We basically control the built environment,” he told his staff. “So who really holds the key to the global thermostat? It’s the architects.”

Finding the Solution
Over the years, says Mazria, buildings have become less connected to the natural environment. In fact, codes actually encouraged sealing up buildings to protect inhabitants from the environment. Mazria estimates that the stock of buildings in the United States is about 260-270 billion square feet. Five billion square feet are built new each year and five billion are renovated, but for the most part as the 21st century begins, the square footage is not sustainable.

With the energy awareness and conservation practices of the 1980s and 90s as a backdrop, more recent attention has focused on development of renewable energy sources by the environmental movement, development of new government codes that call for more insulation and more efficient appliances, and rising standards in the automobile industry. Yet, Mazria adds that those efforts by themselves don’t bend the energy consumption and greenhouse gas emission curves downward. For Mazria, a transformation of the built environment over the next quarter century provides an historic opportunity to dramatically reduce the building sector’s CO2 emissions. He notes that architects have tremendous choice in the design of buildings—from construction materials and the type of heating and cooling systems, down to tile, carpet and paint.

RELI’s Raacke points out that Mazria’s 2030 Challenge is “version three” of an evolution in energy efficiency and lower greenhouse gas emission benchmarks, following ENERGY STAR®, the government-sanctioned badge for energy efficiency, and the U.S. Green Building Council’s LEED certification standards.
“Since much of the world looks to the United States,” Mazria remarks, “it’s important that the U.S. take a leadership role.” n

(Note: Some material for this article was excerpted from Edward Mazria’s presentation at a seminar titled, Key to the Global Thermostat, which was sponsored by AIA New Mexico and Metropolis magazine in September 2003. His full presentation can be accessed at www.metropolismag.com-/cda/story.php?artid=819.)

2010 Imperative to architectural and design students
Mazria’s 2010 Imperative plays an important role in his overall global initiative. He notes that the United States has 124 accredited schools of architecture with 30,000 architectural students, and of them, about 10 to 15% are foreign-born. Many of these foreign students will be returning to their emerging industrialized countries where a tremendous amount of new construction is taking place.

When Mazria and his staff brainstormed for the quickest route to approach the difficult task of changing the way architecture is taught, 2010 Imperative Director Kristina Kershner says, rather than try to rewrite a whole curriculum, they decided the easiest way to make a change was to ask for inclusion of one sentence: All architectural school design problems call for the design to engage the environment in a way that dramatically reduces or eliminates the need for fossil fuels.

Kershner adds that the objective is to have sustainability become “intuitive” so that when students design projects they will say, “We need windows and doors, and we need an energy efficient building. The principles have been used for thousands of years.” Through student research, professors benefit and can bring these techniques to subsequent classes.

“The point we make to students is that you’re going to inherit this world and you’re going to have to design for it,” remarks Kershner. Students are very interested in engaging in the growing trend toward environmentally friendly designs, she notes, especially as they prepare to enter forward-thinking architectural firms.

“Most architecture schools are moving fairly aggressively in addressing climate change in the building sector,” notes Mazria, “and almost every design school now has a carbon-controlled design studio.”

Architecture 2030 had held two webcasts to bring the 2010 Imperative to colleges and students. Its Global Emergency Teach-in, co-sponsored by the American Institute of Architects in February 2007, focused on the role of design education in global warming and reached a quarter of a million students, design professionals and government officials worldwide. A second webcast, Focus the Nation, from Architecture 2030’s website, www.architecture2030.org took place on January 30, 2008 and engaged a similar audience.

 

 

Reaching the 2030 Target

• All new buildings, developments and major renovations shall be designed to meet a fossil fuel, greenhouse gas (GHG)-emitting, energy consumption performance standard of 50% of the regional (or country) average for that building type.

• At a minimum, an equal amount of existing building area shall be renovated annually to meet a fossil fuel, GHG-emitting, energy consumption performance standard of 50% of the regional (or
country) average for that building type. (Renovating existing buildings to consume 50% less fossil fuel energy allows for new buildings that meet the 50% reduction to be built without
increasing the Building Sector’s energy demand.

• The fossil fuel reduction standard for all new buildings shall be increased to:
60% in 2010
70% in 2015
80% in 2020
90% in 2025

Carbon-neutral in 2030 (using no fossil fuel GHG-emitting energy to operate). These targets may be accomplished by implementing innovative sustainable design strategies, generating on-site renewable power and/or purchasing (20% maximum) renewable energy and/or certified renewable energy credits. ­For complete information, see www.architecture2030.org/2030_challenge

 


© 2007 NETWORKING® MAGAZINE
2020 GUIDE TO GOING GREEN

 

 

Networking® Magazine
Who’s Who, What’s What
for Enterprising Executives since 1991

P.O. Box 906 • Remsenburg, New York 11960-0906
Phone (631) 288-1586
Fax (631) 288-1589

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
button to cover button to cover button to publishers note button to contents button to events button to our publisher button to deadlines button to editorial calendar button to mechanical specs  david awards button to advertisers button to who reads button to archive button to get a copy button to contact button to about us