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Pre-20th Century structures were designed and built by builder-architects who had an ability to understand the entire building from design through construction and lifetime operations. They incorporated enduring passive design and simple mechanical systems to heat, cool and light buildings. Architects in the 21st Century will look back upon these ideas to relearn the basics of climatic design.
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1930s new building technologies began to transform urban landscape. Advent of air conditioning, low-wattage fluorescent lighting, structural steel, and reflective glass made possible enclosed glass and steel structures that could be heated and cooled with massive HVAC systems, thanks to availability of cheap fossil fuels. These technologies began a sadly regressive movement in architecture in which architects began to ignore climate issues and their effect on buildings and occupants. Increasing complexity in the industry also brought about specialization in professionals, leading to the loss of the generalists, the builder-architects. This specialization led to an increasing lack of communication between the professionals and therefore of lack of whole systems thinking in designing the various parts of the building. This problem will only begin to be addressed by the start of the 21st Century through the integrated design process.
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1970s, a small group of forward-thinking architects, environmentalists, and ecologists inspired by work of Victor Olgyay (Design with Climate), Ralph Knowles (Form and Stability), and Rachel Carson (Silent Spring), began to question the advisability of building in this manner.
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1973 in response to energy crisis, American Institute of Architects (AIA) formed an energy task force, later the AIA Committee on Energy
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1977 The Department of Energy was created to address energy usage and conservation
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1977 Solar Energy Research Institute was founded (later National Renewable Energy Laboratory) in Golden, CO
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1980 - The Sustainable Buildings Industry Council (SBIC) was founded by the major building trade associations as the Passive Solar Industries Council.
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1987 UN World Commission on the Environment and Development provided the first definition of the term “sustainable development,” as that which “meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs.”
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1989 The AIA Energy Committee formed into the AIA Committee on the Environment (COTE)
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1990 Austin Green Building Program launched (Austin, TX)
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1992 AIA Environmental Resource Guide the first assessment of building products based on life cycle analysis. Credited with encouraging numerous building product manufacturers to make their products more ecologically sensitive.
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1992 UN Conference on Environment and Development in Rio de Janeiro, or “Earth Summit.” Passage of Agenda 21, a blueprint for achieving global sustainability, the Rio declaration on Environment and Development, and statements on forest principles, climate change, and biodiversity.
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1992 Rio Earth Summit awards Austin Green Building Program on of only ten awards for most innovative government environmental programs in the world, the only one awarded to a US program.
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1993 Inspired at Earth Summit, AIA president-elect chose sustainability as theme for International Union of Architects (UIA)/AIA World Congress of Architects. Signed a declaration of Interdependence for a Sustainable Future by AIA president Susan Maxman and UIA president Olufemi Majekodunmi. Today, the “Architecture at the Crossroads” convention is recognized as a turning point in the history of the green building movement.
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1993 Greening of the White House: President Clinton announced plans to make the Presidential mansion “a model for efficiency and waste reduction.” This encouraged participants to green other properties: the Pentagon, the Presidio, and the US Department of Energy Headquarters, Grand Canyon, Yellowstone, Alaska’s Denali
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1993 US Green Building Council Founded
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1994 City of Boulder, CO, GreenPoints Program launched (Boulder, CO)
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1995 The Built Green Colorado Program launched (Denver, CO)
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1997 - Build a Better Kitsap Program launched (Kitsap County, WA)
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1997 The Navy initiated the development of the Whole Building Design Guide, an online resource that incorporates sustainability requirements into mainstream specifications and guidelines. They incorporate sustainable design into the majority of their new projects.
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1998 Green Building Challenge Reps from 14 nations met to create an international assessment tool that takes into account regional and national environmental, economic, and social equity conditions
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1998 Build a Better Clark Program launched (Clark County, WA)
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1998 City of Scottsdale, AZ Sustainable Building Program launched (Scottsdale, AZ)
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1998 AIA/COTE Top 10 Green Projects to call attention to successful sustainable design
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1998 President Clinton issued first of 3 “greening buildings” executive orders
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1999 Earth Craft House Program launched (Atlanta, GA)
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1999 Executive Order 12852 established President Council on Sustainable Development final report, recommending 140 actions to improve the nation’s environment, many related to building sustainability.
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2000 Increasing number of municipalities and corporations begin to demand and set internal standards for green buildings within their organizations. Growth in green building organizations, attendance at professional conferences, and consumer awareness grows exponentially.