“When we build of stone, let us think we build forever.”
John Ruskin
Sustainability: “meeting the needs of the present
without compromising the ability of future generations to meet
their own needs”
World Commission on Environment and Development (Brundtland Report),
1987
Old
is the New Green: The 2011 theme for preservation month

Greening
Your Old House: A guide to home owners who want to
go green

Historic
preservation is inherently green – and needs to be greener.
That is the core message in two PowerPoint presentations that are
now available on the IHPA web site. Mike Jackson, FAIA, the Preservation
Services Division Manager has developed and these messages about
green preservation and presented them to audiences across the state
and the country. This conversation about green (a.k.a. sustainable)
design and preservation begins with a discussion about the future.
Both preservation and green design share a concern about resource
conservation and the goal of making a better future. Preservationists
begin by identifying places that have enduring value and deserve
to be part of the future. Green design begins as a response to the
future challenges of resource depletion, population growth and climate
change. Preservation has an established set of principles, which
have been integrated into contemporary design and construction practices.
Green design is developing in much the same way, as a parallel set
of values that have to be fit into a market-based construction process.
Preservation standards tend to be relatively philosophical, whereas
green standards are highly technical and have both prescriptive
and performance measures. In preservation community there is a nationally
agreed upon set of treatments standards established by the Secretary
of the Interior. In the world of green design, there are now of
number of rapidly evolving green standards, guidelines, certifications
and policies. The role of the “sustainability coordinator”
is fast emerging as a new job for someone with the expertise to
understand and utilize these competing green design approaches.
The lessons of history:
Historic preservationists
have a special insight into projections of the future because of
our understanding of the past. The past teaches us that our ancestors
built structures that used indigenous, renewable materials and produced
buildings that responded to local climatic conditions. Historic
buildings have many attributes that are now promoted as green design.
Operable windows that allow fresh air and daylight, compact building
form that is more efficient to build and heat, and cisterns that
captured rain water were all common in late 19th century homes.
These elements of historic design are now championed as “green.”
Equally green are historic patterns of development. Homes in tight
proximity to their neighbors meant that daily life was “pedestrian
friendly.” Downtown buildings shoulder to shoulder were very
energy efficient. Anyone looking for a planning model of a more
sustainable society should look at virtually any city that developed
in the era before the automobile. In terms of density and land planning,
the city of the 2060s may be more like the city of 1860 than the
city of 1960. Preservationists and “smart growth” advocates
are both aware of this common value, which is now a part of green
planning and design systems. Historic preservationists understand
how historic residential neighborhoods and older downtown function
from cultural, social, and economic perspectives, and it is quite
easy to add an ecological benefit to the discussion.
The tools of green
One of the special challenges to this intersection between preservation
and green design has been an examination of the tools that attempt
to measure sustainable design. The LEED (Leadership in Energy and
Environmental Design) rating system of the United States Green Building
Council (USGBC) has become the most common basis for evaluating
commercial design in the United States. For residential buildings
there are many different green design rating systems. The LEED scorecard
does not give much value to building reuse. The underlying roots
of this imbalance, and the potential methods of addressing this
imbalance have been a focus of the preservation community. The use
of Life Cycle Analysis (LCA) to better quantify the value of building
reuse is emerging as the building science tool that is needed. The
National Trust for Historic Preservation is taking the lead in this
research.
Historic property owners with viable and well-maintained buildings
are asking a different question. They aren’t asking whether
or not they should replace their buildings. Instead, they want to
know the best green practices for their structures. Green rating
systems developed for new construction don’t work that well
for buildings that are not undergoing total makeovers. The continuous
improvement of existing buildings is a more appropriate strategy,
which can be aided by green guidelines. This is particularly true
for historic home owners, who are constantly making maintenance,
restoration, and life-style improvements to their homes.
Energy
Virtually all models of sustainable design have at their core strong
principles of energy conservation and efficiency. The depletion
of fossil fuels could be the single greatest challenge of the 21st
century. The popular notion that old buildings are “energy
hogs” has not proven to be true for commercial buildings.
Several recent studies have shown that older commercial buildings
can be just as energy efficient as new buildings. The same thing
cannot be said for homes. Statistically, pre-WWII homes are one-third
to one-half less efficient than new ones. Making historic and older
homes more energy efficient is therefore a critical green preservation
strategy. How to identify the most cost effective methods to achieve
energy efficiency without compromising historic integrity is the
essential question. The topics of windows and insulation are particularly
important issues that have come to dominate this discussion. Fortunately,
new products, technologies and techniques are a being developed
to address this challenge. For example, the insulated glass storm
window is a new green preservation product that just came onto the
market in 2010. High efficiency furnaces and geothermal systems
are two examples of “invisible green” technologies.
The best practice for “deep energy retrofits” is a growing
subject of research that will occupy increasing amounts of preservation
discussion in the years to come.
Conclusion:
The art and science of sustainability is based upon the three E’s
- environment, economy, and equity. Advocates of sustainable design
are using these principles to quantify ecologically beneficial building
and development practices. The historic preservation movement is
well positioned to do the same. Reduce, reuse, recyle has become
a mantra of the environmental movement. The preservation movement
is true champion of building reuse. This experience has taught us
many lessons about the economic, cultural and ecological values
of buildings and communities. The historic preservation movement,
as a profession and an approach to the treatment of the built environment,
is doing something much more important than defining how to save
buildings. We are advocates for historic buildings, but we are also
building a culture of urban revitalization and building conservation.
This may be our most important contribution to the art and science
of sustainability.
Mike
Jackson, FAIA
Illinois Historic Preservation
Agency
|