The Green Building Bottom Line

Title: The Green Building Bottom Line
Author: Martin Melaver, Phyllis Mueller
ISBN: 0071599215 / 9780071599214
Format: Hard Cover
Pages: 384
Publisher: McGraw-Hill
Year: 2009
Availability: In Stock

Tab Article

As any builder knows, cost estimation and reality are often two very different things. The Green Building Bottom Line makes the case for green building by providing the insights and data that demonstrate the true costs and benefits of building green. It's a “why to” and a “how to” that explores everything from the ground up.The Green Building Bottom Line puts an entire development team at the table to better understand both the issues encountered and what's behind the perceived price premium for building green.This candid and transparent account explores every aspect of green development on groundbreaking projects, from the nation's first all-retail LEED core and shell project to an innovative multitenanted LEED-Existing Buildings office project, to a mixed-use hotel-retail-condo project in a transitional urban market. The authors focus on such issues as values, culture, life-cycle costs, insurance, financing, coordinating a team, marketing, and negotiating leases.

Includes:

. Detailed case studies of green-building projects, start to finish
. Information on financial, legal, and operational aspects of the job
. The real-world costs of green building-not unrealistic estimates
. A behind-the-scenes look at the LEED building process
. Unique insight from those who have actually done the work

The Green Building Bottom Line covers:
• Economical and ecological benefits • Auditing sustainability in existing buildings • Financial benefits of green tenancy • Loan analysis • Insurance underwriting • Expense reduction • Writing a green lease • Converting an existing building • Green retail • Brokering sustainability • Marketing • HR practices and processes

Tab Article

About the Contributors
Acknowledgments
Introduction

Chapter 1 : Narrating Values, Shaping Values, Creating Values
Chapter 2 : "Green Glue" : HR Practices and Processes That Make Sustainable Values Stick
Chapter 3 : Green from the Inside Out
Chapter 4 : Green Is the Color of Money
Chapter 5 : Green Is (Also) the Color of Inexperience : Learning from a LEED Pilot Project
Chapter 6 : Existing Buildings : The Green-Headed Stepchild of the Sustainability Movement
Chapter 7 : Dollars and (Common) Sense : Realizing the Value of Green for Key Users
Chapter 8 : Sustainable Brokerage : Diffusing Green Practices to Gain Broad Market Acceptance
Chapter 9 : The Fine Print : Legal Issues in Green Building Projects
Chapter 10 : Marketing Sustainable Development : A Million Shades of Green

Conclusion : Inscribing Key Lessons Learned into the Fabric of a Green Business
Index