Marriott Hotel Going Green

Marriott International unveiled a prototype last week that will help it build more green, LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design)-certified hotels.

Charleston/Summerville is the first of Marriott hotels set to open in early 2012, will be a LEED hotel, created in partnership with the US Green Building Council.

According to their press, using the prototype will save the hotel giant six months of design time on each hotel. That’s about what the company says it would usually take to design a LEED-certificate worth new property. Marriott plans to roll out similar prototypes for its other brands in the future, including Residence Inn by Marriott and Towne Place Suites. Read more of this post

Builders Question Efficacy of Green Certification (Washington, D.C.)


According to a  story I just read on Washington Business Journal,  the U.S. Green Building Council’s (USGBC) certification affiliate is making plans to bring the process for reviewing green building applications back in house after some in the builder community raised doubts about its effectiveness. The plan was previously attempted about a year ago.

The Green Building Certification Institute, which began contracting out the review process for its Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design certification last April,  plans to resume management over a bulk of LEED application reviews in the next two years. For the past year, in an effort to cut down a growing backlog of applications and slash months-long delays in review times, the institute had been contracting out the review and quality-control processes to 10 outside organizations that specialize in general certification consulting, as opposed to the green building niche. Read more of this post

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