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public affairs
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January 31, 2008
PASADENA STRENGTHENS GREEN BUILDING STANDARDS
At its first meeting in 2008, the Pasadena City Council unanimously
adopted amendments to the city’s Green Building Ordinance, ensuring that
new and renovated municipal buildings and large, privately owned
buildings will have even less of a negative impact on the earth’s
resources.
In 2006, Pasadena became one of the first cities in the nation to
mandate that new city buildings and large private-sector buildings be
designed and constructed according to the U.S. Green Building Council’s
Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) building standards.
The LEED rating system awards points for measures in five design
categories – sustainable site planning, water quality and conservation,
energy efficiency and renewable energy, conservation of materials and
resources, and indoor air quality – and offers four levels of
certification from a beginning ranking of LEED Certified to Silver, Gold
and Platinum at the highest level.
Pasadena’s new amendments raise the green building rating for large
commercial buildings and new municipal buildings from LEED Certified to
LEED Silver. A new category for municipal building renovations requires
those with a threshold of 15,000 square feet to meet the LEED Silver
level. To ensure water conservation, the amendments now require that
applicable green buildings be more water efficient, installing fixtures
that use cumulatively 20 percent less water than standard buildings.
Currently, 40 percent of our nation’s annual resources are used for
building construction and occupancy. Green buildings use renewable
resources, reduce energy and water consumption, improve occupant health
and stimulate economic vitality.
Since adoption of the ordinance, nearly a quarter of a million square
feet of commercial and institutional space in Pasadena has been
certified as sustainable.
For more information visit
www.cityofpasadena.net/greencity and click on Green Building Program
or call (626) 744-3726.
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