PHILADELPHIA (November 20, 2013) — The U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC) announced that LEED v4, the newest version of the LEED green building program, launched at the annual Greenbuild International Conference and Expo in Philadelphia on Nov. 20. LEED has been a benchmark for the design, construction and operation of high-performance green buildings since 1998. LEED v4 builds on the fundamentals of previous versions, while offering a new system that prepares all LEED projects in a portfolio to perform at a higher level. “LEED v4 is a quantum leap for LEED,” said Rick Fedrizzi, president, CEO and founding chair of USGBC. “Over the past 15 years, LEED has fundamentally revolutionized how we design, construct, operate and maintain our buildings and communities. LEED has created a completely new industry of business enterprise committed to energy savings and efficiency. LEED v4 is as much a testament to the achievements of LEED project teams around the world as it is to the green building community’s ambition to create significant global and local change through resource-efficient, cost-effective green buildings.” LEED v4 encourages and accelerates global adoption of sustainable green building and development practices through the creation and implementation of universally understood and accepted tools and performance criteria. Already, 122 beta projects from around the world are using LEED v4. Highlights of LEED v4 include the following:
- New market sectors: New market sector adaptations for LEED include data centers, warehouses and distribution centers, hospitality, existing schools, existing retail and mid-rise residential projects.
- Time-saving support tools and resources: Simplified LEED credit submittal requirements, descriptive step-by-step reference guide materials with videos and tutorials and a more intuitive technology platform.
- Building performance management: LEED v4 is focused on outcomes so that building owners have a better understanding of how to manage their buildings to meet full performance potential.
- New impact categories: Climate change, human health, water resources, biodiversity, green economy, community and natural resources.