Sustainable Land Development Today - September 2008 - (Page 34) RETENTION Part of a Greater, Sustainable Whole Earth-friendly retaining wall alternative can support local sustainable development and address global environmental concerns. By Paul Forsberg Achieving sustainability in any development project requires more than just assembling and incorporating a set of green products. It takes planning. It takes integrated design. As Steven Kellenberg, explained in his article in the June issue of Sustainable Land Development Today (“Integrated Planning: The Key to Developing Sustainable Planned Communities”), integrated design is “a strategy that interlinks and balances a project’s context, ecology, site planning, infrastructure, landscape and building design into a form that in totality exceeds the performance of its individual components.” In other words, the sustainable whole should add up to more than the sum of its green parts. It is essential to identify and leverage interconnections and interdependencies in every project. This integrated approach to project planning ensures the sustainability of developments and reduces the costs of going green. Managing the costs of green building in the context of total project budgets is critical. Green has to make economic sense in order to fully transition into the mainstream. The cost-effective and environmentally-friendly use of recycled content in lieu of virgin resources is a prime example of how innovative, “green” products can be a part of a greater, sustainable whole. planning at the local level, we should keep in view how specific green choices contribute to addressing global environmental issues. Consider cement. Its production is energy-intensive and releases vast amounts of carbon dioxide, the primary cause global warming. In fact, the world’s cement plants generate about five percent of all global emissions of carbon dioxide annually. Cement manufacturers are investing in cleaner production processes. However, available technologies can only reduce cement plants’ greenhouse gas emissions by an estimated 20 percent. Even with the best possible improvements foreseeable in the near term, each ton of cement produced will still generate more than 600 pounds of carbon dioxide. Worldwide demand for cement products continues to increase, particularly in fast-growing emerging economies – most especially in China. According to The Freedonia Group, an industrial market research firm in Cleveland, Ohio, demand for cement in China has been increasing by about five percent annually. It will top one billion metric tons this year and could reach 1.3 billion metric tons in two years. China is now the world’s largest national consumer of cement and will account for 40 percent to 50 percent of global cement consumption in 2010. Moreover, China is one of the leading cement exporters in the world, accounting for some 17 percent of the total cement trade worldwide. The United States is the largest market for Chinese cement. There are more than 8,000 cement plants in China. As noted in a Battelle study commissioned by the World Business Council for Sustainable Development, China relies almost exclusively on coal to produce cement. The local environmental impact in China is severe, and the global impact is accelerating. The International Energy Agency (IEA) projects that China, in no small part due to cement production, will overtake the United States as the largest generator of carbon dioxide emissions in the next few years. Of course, no individual developer can change the U.S. market for cement – no less China’s. Developers can, however, take steps to reduce their use of cement. When it makes sense to do so in the context of integrated planning for individual projects, decreasing cement use can contribute to achieving sustainability locally and supports big-picture environmental responsibility globally. Earthy-friendly retaining walls Cement is the primary ingredient in concrete. Approximately 500 million concrete blocks are sold annually for segmental retaining walls (SRWs) in North America. Using an earth-friendly alternative in retaining wall construction is one option for developers to consider for decreasing the use of concrete. Millenia Wall Solutions uses 100 percent recycled, pre-consumer polymeric resin materials in its retaining wall system. These materials are inert and do not interact with the soil. Therefore, there is no absorption from surrounding soils and no leaching into them. An independent Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) undertaken by Terrafore, Inc., Riverside, California concluded that when used instead of concrete blocks, Millenia’s lightweight polymer wall units provide a 55 percent reduction in overall environmental impact, including a 65 percent reduction in associated greenhouse gas emissions. Based on the U.S. Green Building Council’s Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) Green Building Rating System, using these walls units in construction applications can earn up to eight LEED credit points. The big picture Integrated planning for any particular development project must be local. It has to focus in on the immediate context of every specific site. When developers, architects, builders and contractors consider green technologies and materials for a site, they should, as Kellenberg outlined, assess how their choices will complement and amplify each other in order to support the overall sustainability of the project. But it is equally important to consider the bigger picture, and the biggest picture is global. Within the context of integrated 34 September 2008 Sustainable Land Development Today Solve site problems – and go green Sustainability was not top of mind when Bill Jackson first thought about
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of Sustainable Land Development Today - September 2008 Sustainable Land Development Today - September 2008 Contents Our Voice The Bottomline Editorial Board SLDT Resources Digging Deep Oases of Capital Build a Better Business on an Interactive, Virtual Landscape Regulation SLDI in Focus SLDI Sponsored Summit Workshops Bookstore Tee’d Up for Sustainability Retention Solutions Wastewater Redevelopment Industry News Marketplace Products/Services Showcase Advertiser Index The Last Word Sustainable Land Development Today - September 2008 Sustainable Land Development Today - September 2008 - Sustainable Land Development Today - September 2008 (Page Cover1) Sustainable Land Development Today - September 2008 - Sustainable Land Development Today - September 2008 (Page Cover2) Sustainable Land Development Today - September 2008 - Sustainable Land Development Today - September 2008 (Page 3) Sustainable Land Development Today - September 2008 - Contents (Page 4) Sustainable Land Development Today - September 2008 - Contents (Page 5) Sustainable Land Development Today - September 2008 - Our Voice (Page 6) Sustainable Land Development Today - September 2008 - Our Voice (Page 7) Sustainable Land Development Today - September 2008 - The Bottomline (Page 8) Sustainable Land Development Today - September 2008 - The Bottomline (Page 9) Sustainable Land Development Today - September 2008 - SLDT Resources (Page 10) Sustainable Land Development Today - September 2008 - SLDT Resources (Page 11) Sustainable Land Development Today - September 2008 - Digging Deep (Page 12) Sustainable Land Development Today - September 2008 - Digging Deep (Page 13) Sustainable Land Development Today - September 2008 - Digging Deep (Page 14) Sustainable Land Development Today - September 2008 - Digging Deep (Page 15) Sustainable Land Development Today - September 2008 - Oases of Capital (Page 16) Sustainable Land Development Today - September 2008 - Oases of Capital (Page 17) Sustainable Land Development Today - September 2008 - Oases of Capital (Page 18) Sustainable Land Development Today - September 2008 - Oases of Capital (Page 19) Sustainable Land Development Today - September 2008 - Build a Better Business on an Interactive, Virtual Landscape (Page 20) Sustainable Land Development Today - September 2008 - Build a Better Business on an Interactive, Virtual Landscape (Page 21) Sustainable Land Development Today - September 2008 - Regulation (Page 22) Sustainable Land Development Today - September 2008 - Regulation (Page 23) Sustainable Land Development Today - September 2008 - Regulation (Page 24) Sustainable Land Development Today - September 2008 - Regulation (Page 25) Sustainable Land Development Today - September 2008 - SLDI Sponsored Summit (Page 26) Sustainable Land Development Today - September 2008 - Workshops (Page 27) Sustainable Land Development Today - September 2008 - Bookstore (Page 28) Sustainable Land Development Today - September 2008 - Bookstore (Page 29) Sustainable Land Development Today - September 2008 - Tee’d Up for Sustainability (Page 30) Sustainable Land Development Today - September 2008 - Tee’d Up for Sustainability (Page 31) Sustainable Land Development Today - September 2008 - Tee’d Up for Sustainability (Page 32) Sustainable Land Development Today - September 2008 - Tee’d Up for Sustainability (Page 33) Sustainable Land Development Today - September 2008 - Retention Solutions (Page 34) Sustainable Land Development Today - September 2008 - Retention Solutions (Page 35) Sustainable Land Development Today - September 2008 - Wastewater (Page 36) Sustainable Land Development Today - September 2008 - Wastewater (Page 37) Sustainable Land Development Today - September 2008 - Redevelopment (Page 38) Sustainable Land Development Today - September 2008 - Redevelopment (Page 39) Sustainable Land Development Today - September 2008 - Redevelopment (Page 40) Sustainable Land Development Today - September 2008 - Redevelopment (Page 41) Sustainable Land Development Today - September 2008 - Industry News (Page 42) Sustainable Land Development Today - September 2008 - Products/Services Showcase (Page 43) Sustainable Land Development Today - September 2008 - Products/Services Showcase (Page 44) Sustainable Land Development Today - September 2008 - Advertiser Index (Page 45) Sustainable Land Development Today - September 2008 - The Last Word (Page 46) Sustainable Land Development Today - September 2008 - The Last Word (Page Cover3) Sustainable Land Development Today - September 2008 - The Last Word (Page Cover4)
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