flexiblefullpage -
billboard - default
interstitial1 - interstitial
catfish1 - bottom
Currently Reading

LEED Steering Committee approves resiliency pilot credits

Smart Buildings

LEED Steering Committee approves resiliency pilot credits

Three credits address planning, design, and survivability.


By Peter Fabris, Contributing Editor | December 1, 2015
LEED Steering Committee approves resiliency pilot credits

Specific assessment requirements are provided for the following hazards including wildfires, as seen here in Texas in 2011. Photo: Joe Wolf/Creative Commons.

Three LEED pilot credits on resilient design spearheaded by the Resilient Design Institute have been approved by the LEED Steering Committee.

The credits are designed for building teams to be aware of vulnerabilities, and they address the most significant risks in project designs including functionality of the building in the event of long-term interruptions in power or heating fuel. The credits encourage designers to plan for a wide range of natural disasters or disturbances as well as to consider longer-term trends affecting building performance such as climate change.

Specific assessment requirements are provided for the following hazard types:

  • Flooding
  • Hurricane
  • Tornado/high wind
  • Earthquake
  • Tsunami
  • Wildfire
  • Drought
  • Landslide/unstable soils

The Passive Survivability and Functionality During Emergencies credit addresses: thermal resilience, back-up power, and access to potable water. Creators of the credits recognize that they will be hard for many design teams to achieve. The intent is to “test-drive” the credits and then figure out if there are ways to refine and simplify them.

Related Stories

Resiliency | Jan 29, 2016

Section of New Orleans will try new approach to flood control

The city will turn to a retain and control storm water strategy.

BIM and Information Technology | Jan 27, 2016

Seeing double: Dassault Systèmes creating Virtual Singapore that mirrors the real world

The virtual city will be used to help predict the outcomes of and possible issues with various scenarios.

Smart Buildings | Dec 15, 2015

Property owners and developers challenge FEMA floodplain maps

Agency said to be open to revision requests.

Smart Buildings | Dec 7, 2015

AIA Baltimore holds rowhouse redesign competition

Teams competed to provide the best social and environmental design solutions for the city’s existing rowhouse stock. 

Smart Buildings | Nov 30, 2015

New neighborhoods in Hamburg, Germany resilient to flooding, carbon neutral

Mixed-use areas built on brownfields and derelict districts.

Smart Buildings | Nov 13, 2015

Miami Beach making plans to cope with rising sea levels, flooding

The city has turned to sea walls, raised streets, and pumping stations.

Smart Buildings | Nov 11, 2015

No eyes on the road: The impact of driverless vehicles

The idea that space can be repurposed by breaking dependence on the purchase, maintenance, and storage of a big machine is a great boon for the sustainable future of cities, writes SmithGroupJJR's David Varner.

Smart Buildings | Nov 9, 2015

White paper promotes incentives for improved disaster resilience

The white paper makes the case that the most cost-effective manner to achieve resilience is through a holistic and integrated set of public, private, and hybrid programs.

Smart Buildings | Nov 5, 2015

JLL names 10 emerging world cities

Mexico City, Shanghai, Istanbul, and seven other world-class cities have experienced rapid economic growth and real estate development.

Cultural Facilities | Oct 28, 2015

New York City’s underground 'Lowline' green space enters the testing phase

If realized, The Lowline would provide 1.5 acres of green space for the Lower East Side of Manhattan.

boombox1 - default
boombox2 -
native1 -

More In Category




halfpage1 -

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021