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Home » USGBC Colorado Reports 2015 LEED Certified Projects

USGBC Colorado Reports 2015 LEED Certified Projects

August 27, 2015
ACP Staff
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DENVER, CO The U.S. Green Building Council Colorado Chapter (USGBC Colorado) releases its mid-year report on LEED-certified projects in the state for the first half of 2015. Halfway through 2015, the report finds 73 projects already represent 8,524,716 square feet of real estate, putting the state on track to outpace 2014 numbers. In the previous year, Colorado certified a total of 102 projects representing 15,816,498 square feet of real estate.

"The Rocky Mountain region's committed business and community leaders and green building professionals are using LEED to transform their built environments to improve the health and wellbeing of not only our planet, but the buildings' occupants and residents as well, and that effort is noted in these mid-year numbers," said Patti Mason, Executive Director, USGBC Colorado. "These numbers show that LEED certification is becoming more common for buildings in the state, helping Colorado continue to lead the way in green building."

In the first quarter of 2015, there were 2 projects that reached the Platinum level, 16 Gold, 17 Silver, and 10 Certified, totaling 45 projects overall. In the second quarter, 4 projects were granted Platinum status, 15 Gold, 5 Silver, and 4 Certified, totaling 28 LEED-certified projects. The majority of the buildings were in Denver, Colorado, which had 25 projects, and Fort Collins, Colorado, which had 18 projects.

"Increasing the number of LEED-certified spaces in Colorado is important because these buildings use less energy and water, save money for families and businesses, contribute to our economic growth, and improve the quality of life in the communities where they are found," said Mason.

Several 2015 projects are in education, including buildings on the Colorado State University Campus and University of Colorado Denver. In addition, many of the LEED certified schools are in rural areas due to the BEST Grant Program, which provides an annual amount of funding in the form of competitive grants to schools. Rural areas in Colorado are now building sustainable schools to help save on energy and water bills and improve students' health.

USGBC Colorado, which hosts the upcoming Green Schools Summit, an annual education and networking event organized by the Green Schools Initiative, has a special interest in education.

Mason said, "Our goal is to green Colorado's schools within a generation, and the solid growth of educational organizations' LEED certifications is bringing us closer to that objective."

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