In Commercial Real Estate, Green Buildings a Luxury

What makes a building green?

Turns out, that’s not always such an easy question to answer.

How efficiently the building supplies and consumes energy, the sustainability of the materials used in its construction, the sustainability of the site its located on, the relationship between its design and its impact on the environment, and how energy efficient its occupants are all contribute to a building’s green profile.

WhileA�a number of standards exist to help answer this question,A�one of theA�mostA�visible isA�the Leadership in Energy and Efficiency Design (LEED) ratings system.

With over 200,000 LEED certified buildings globally, momentumA�is growing, as is the pressure for real estate developers and landlords to get onboard.

Still, progress is slow.

In New York City, where one might expect an aggressive trend toward green buildings, progress has been gradual to say the least. Out of roughly 4,000 commercial buildings in Manhattan, 41 have a Core & Shell (like the buildings’A�exoskeleton) that is LEED certified or pending LEED certification. That’s a scant one percent.

View NYC’s LEED Certified/Pending Buildings: in a full screen map

To some degree, it may be up to tenants to push for higher green standards.

Beyond exploring green standards they can pursue themselves or work out with landlords on, large tenants in particuarl can have a say in the desirability of LEED certified commercial space.

As more of these green buildings go up, they will start to impact property values, too. Much in the way Walkscore has.

As aggressive development continues in the city, particularly in places like Long Island City and various parts of Brooklyn, the LEED ratings system may yet becomeA�another way to grantA�properties prestige.

It’s one thing to occupy a Class A building. It’s another toA�occupy aA�Platinum LEED, Class A building. Such a status denotes a purusit ofA�the all-important A�”efficiency” that every company desires. Both in environmental and human workspace terms, green buildings evoke that standard.A�They also evoke innovation and responsible leadership. All pillars commercialA�tenants, especially those in tech,A�want to be aligned with.

It’s important to note that other systems in playA�like Enery StarA�enjoy wide adoption throughoutA�real estate. And the rigorous nature of theA�standards the US Green Buildings Department has laid out in its LEED program can present a challenging cost-benefit analysis to real estate developers who could puruse a different set of green standards at a lighter cost.

Then again, they don’t call it “Leadership” in Energy and Efficiency Design for nothing.

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