
What is green building? Green building is a design and construction practice that promotes the economic health and well-being of your family, community and the environment. Green building is a smart step towards economic rewards that also have a positive social and environmental impact on the way we live for years to come.
Water:
Older toilets use 3.7-7 gallons per flush
Dishwashers use 8-14 gallons per cycle
Top-loading washers use 45 gallons/load
A dripping faucet waste 15-21 gallons per day
US water users withdraw enough water to fill a line of Olympic-size swimming pools reaching around the world EVERY DAY (300 billion gallons)
Although our planet is 71 percent water, humans depend on a mere .65 percent of the water for survival – much of which is polluted.
About a quarter of the nation’s largest industrial plants and water treatment facilities are in serious violation of pollution standards at any one time.
An estimated 7 million Americans are made sick annually by contaminated tap water; in some rare cases this results in death.
Indoor Air Quality:
US EPA ranks indoor air pollution among top five environmental risks. Unhealthy air is found in up to 30% of new and renovated buildings
W.H.O. reports that indoor air pollution causes 14 times more deaths than outdoor air pollution (2.8 million lives)
Of hundreds of EPA-regulated chemicals, only ozone and sulfur dioxide are more prevalent outdoor than indoors
20 percent of all housing in the US has too much lead dust or chippings (causes kidney and red blood cell damage, impairs mental and physical development, may increase high blood pressure)
Wood:
Although the US is home to only 4.5 percent of the global population, it is responsible for over 15 percent of the world’s consumption of wood.