San Francisco Once Step Closer to Mandatory LEED
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Mandatory LEED in San Francisco is a critical step closer to being fully approved, according to yesterday’s San Francisco Chronicle. The Building Inspection Commission signed off on it last night. Its now at the Board of Supervisors for approval.
Bare Bones Overview
Under the proposed addition to the building codes, the following construction must be LEED-certified:
- new residential high-rise buildings taller than 75 feet
- new commercial buildings larger than 5,000 sf
- renovations on commercial buildings larger than 25,000
Additionally, new residential construction will have to comply with Build It Green’s GreenPoint Rated system.
The article also indicates that complying with the legislation will cost developers an additional 5% on their project budgets, but does not provide a source for this particular information.
No Incentives on Tap
Interestingly, a city official is quoted as saying that city officials had hoped to offer incentives to builders whose projects obtained highest levels of environmental performance, but they scrapped the idea because they feared “it could lead to developers unnecessarily tearing down buildings or remodeling structures in order to take advantage of incentives”.
Hmmm…. so exactly how much in incentive fundings did the City think it would have to shell out? I’m sure they could have devised some sort of method to reduce this particular concern, (if this was truly the main concern).
The quote:
“What we now have is legislation that says if you’re going to build, you have to build to this standard. But it doesn’t encourage you to build a green building in lieu of keeping an existing building.”
Read the article for yourself and decide.



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