1 / 28

Building a Sustainability Program for Healthcare Facilities

Learn about the key steps and strategies for developing a sustainability program in healthcare facilities, including resource use, sustainability coordinator roles, LEED-EB:O&M certification, and more.

sudie
Download Presentation

Building a Sustainability Program for Healthcare Facilities

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Basic Building blocks for Developing a Sustainability Program Florida Healthcare Engineering Association September 22, 2010

  2. Existing Building – Resource Use • 72% of all Electricity Consumption • 38% of All (CO2) Emissions • 40% of Raw Materials Use • 30% of Waste Output • 14% of Potable Water Consumption

  3. Healthcare Facility Factors • Commercial Buildings – 4% of Built Area • Healthcare – 7% of Commercial Built Area • Healthcare Facilities – 2x Energy Use • 1 of 6 Energy Units used in Healthcare

  4. Developing a Sustainability Program – Initial Steps • Make a Corporate Commitment • Draft Strategic Plan • Existing Facility Gap Analysis • Develop Performance Goals • Prioritize Sustainable Actions

  5. Sustainability Coordinator • (The sustainability coordinator functions to develop and lead the sustainability initiatives) • Leads General Environmental Sustainable Strategic Planning • Sustainable product procurement • Waste elimination and toxicity reduction

  6. Sustainability Coordinator • (The sustainability coordinator functions to develop and lead the sustainability initiatives) • Champion for Energy and water conservation • Indoor Environment Quality • Tracking and benchmarking environmental programs

  7. Sustainability Coordinator • (The sustainability coordinator functions to develop and lead the sustainability initiatives) • Interdepartmental coordination of programs • Interface with internal and external stakeholders

  8. Sustainability Coordinator • Administrative Responsibilities • Interacts with fellow professionals and public • Excellent communication, management and organizational skills • Develops Faculty Green Team • Chairs Facility Green Team • Resource for Employee Advisory Groups

  9. Sustainability Coordinator • Environmental Responsibilities • Sustainable Product Procurement • Waste Elimination/Toxicity Reduction • Energy/Water Use Conservation • Environmental Health & Safety • Indoor Environmental Quality

  10. Facility – Operational Elements • Site • Energy • Materials Management • Indoor Air Quality • Housekeeping

  11. LEED for Existing Buildings: Operations and Maintenance (LEED-EB:O&M) • Sustainable Sites • Water Efficiency • Energy and Atmosphere • Materials and Resources • Indoor Environmental Quality • Innovation in Operations • Regional Priority • US Green Building Council rating system for green operations and maintenance practices

  12. LEED for Existing Buildings: Operations and Maintenance (LEED-EB:O&M) • A key goal of LEED-EB:O&M is to institutionalize a process of reporting, inspection and review over the lifespan of the building.

  13. LEED-EB:O&M Framework for Organization • LEED-EB:O&M can provide an organizing template for tracking sustainability performance • Checklist for quick reference • Reference Guide acts as a “how-to” manual

  14. www.usgbc.org

  15. MAPPING LEED-EB:O&M TO THE SUSTAINABILITY PROGRAM AND ACTIVITIES • Administration • Communication Tools and “Dashboarding” • Environmentally Preferable Purchasing Polices (MRp1 & RC1-5) • Documenting Sustainable Building Cost Impacts (IOc3)

  16. MAPPING LEED-EB:O&M TO THE SUSTAINABILITY PROGRAM AND ACTIVITIES • Facility - Measurement and Verification • Water Performance (WEc1) • Optimize Energy Performance (EAc1) • Energy System Level Metering (EAc3.2)

  17. MAPPING LEED-EB:O&M TO THE SUSTAINABILITY PROGRAM AND ACTIVITIES • Facility Site • Transportation Impact • - Alternative Commuting Transportation (SSc4)

  18. MAPPING LEED-EB:O&M TO THE SUSTAINABILITY PROGRAM AND ACTIVITIES • Environmental • Waste Elimination • - Solid Waste Management Policies (MRp2 and MRC6-9) • Toxicity Reduction • - Green Cleaning Policies and Programs (EQp3 and EQc3.1-3.6)

  19. MAPPING LEED-EB:O&M TO THE SUSTAINABILITY PROGRAM AND ACTIVITIES • Environmental • General Environment • - Integrated Pest Management (SSc3) • - Stormwater Quality Control (SSc6) • - Emissions Reduction Reporting (EAc6)

  20. MAPPING LEED-EB:O&M TO THE SUSTAINABILITY PROGRAM AND ACTIVITIES • Environmental • Environmental Health & Safety • - Minimum IAQ Performance (EQp1) • - IAQ Best Management Practices (EQc1.1-1.5) • - Occupant Comfort and Control (EQc2.1-2.3)

  21. LEED-EB:O&M – Certification benefits • LEED helps building owners and managers • - Solve building problems • - Improve building performance • - Maintain and improve this performance over time

  22. LEED-EB:O&M – Certification benefits • LEED • - Reduces cost streams associated with building operations • - Reduces environmental impacts • - Creates healthier and more productive employee workspaces • - Provides public recognition for leadership in sustainability

  23. LEED-EB:O&M – Certification benefits • LEED-EB:O&M – Encourages owners and • operators of existing buildings to • - Implement sustainable practices • - Reduce the environment impacts of their building over their functional life cycles.

  24. LEED-EB:O&M – Certification benefits • LEED certification is third-party validation of a building’s performance. • LEED certified projects blend environmental, economic, and occupant-orientated performance.

  25. LEED-EB:O&M – Certification benefits • LEED Certified Buildings • - Cost less to operate and maintain • - Are energy and water efficient • - Are healthier and safer for occupants • - Are a physical demonstration of the values of • the organizations and occupy them

  26. Basic Building blocks for Developing a Sustainability Program Q & A

More Related