This is pic a guide to LEED 2009—it’s bigger than most phone books. And it reads a little bit like the tax code (although frankly not as bad as some certification systems—I think FSC guidelines are probably an even more challenging slog.) Now mate this phone book with a college level calculus textbook and you start getting closer to LEED V4.
I’m not even going to try to do the math. But I’m not kidding when I say some of this reads like an advance math text—here’s actual screen caps of the guidelines for calculating potential contributions:
Doesn’t that make you miss the good old days of “if a train leaves Union Station at 3pm and travels at an average rate of 60mph…”
Well, anyway, I thought I had a pretty good handle on the older LEED versions, so I am now trying to figure out how the flooring industry is going to work with LEED V4. The way I see it, the changes are really threefold:
1. A radical restructuring of the category system
2. A significant increase in the need for Transparency/Third Party Certification for products to be considered compliant
3. The addition and subtraction of familiar options.
I’ll look at each of these points in the next blogs and we’ll see if we can figure all this out.