In The Press

By Matt Root

BuildingEnergy: The IDP Issue | Vol 40. No. 1 | 2021 | Pages 28-31

When you think of sustainability and green building you probably envision solar panels, composting toilets and water catchment systems. Achieving sustainability is much deeper than that, and now includes the ability to find, track and use healthier building materials. Integrated Eco Strategy provides a two fold approach to achieving healthier materials by offering both Project Consulting Services and the worlds leading healthier materials management software, Red2Green.

Those who have accomplished it will tell you—full disclosure— addressing sustainability at the building level can be a challenging feat. Our newest member at IES, Amy Johns, who is also an endurance runner shares her philosophy of running and a moving approach to achieving the Living Building Challenge in ILFI’s, Trim Tab.

Our Favorite Sustainable Products and More for November/December 2018

by gb&d Staff

On the Red2Green Materials Database:

“This crowdsourcing tool makes designing and specifying construction projects for the Living Building Challenge more efficient, and the database grows as the community of Living Buildings grows. Red2Green Materials Database helps you evaluate healthy building materials and select the right one for a specific project. The software allows you to gather, report, and compare ingredient and emissions information on products used in all facets of new building and renovation to make meeting materials compliance easier for building owners, architects, contractors, consultants, and materials specialists.” [full article]

Red2Green logo

From Red List to Ready List

By Jonathan A. Wright

“One of the primary goals of the Living Building Challenge (LBC) is to eliminate the use of known toxins in products installed in the built environment. If it is harmful to life — human, animal or anything else — do not use it if at all possible.” [continue article]

For Immediate Release:
May 8, 2018
Contact: Charley Stevenson, Owner & Principal
Integrated Eco Strategy, LLC
85 Main St. North Adams, MA 01247
413-884-2571
charley@integratedecostrategy.com
Photographs available upon request

 

Integrated Eco Strategy Helps Hampshire College Earn Top Environmental Certification

NORTH ADAMS, MA—Healthy materials consulting and software firm Integrated Eco Strategy (IES) has helped Hampshire College’s R.W. Kern Center achieve Living Building Challenge (LBC) certification, the world’s most stringent green building performance standard. The 17,000-square-foot, $10.4 million Center joins only 16 other LBC buildings certified to date, and follows the Williams College Environmental Center, Williamstown, as the second to be materials certified with the assistance of IES.

“We are particularly proud, as a Massachusetts company, to help local institutions achieve worldwide recognition for their green building projects,” said Charley Stevenson, IES owner and principal. “Together we are transforming the market and making the entire process healthier for all concerned—from the communities and companies where products are manufactured to construction workers and the buildings’ inhabitants.”

The Kern Center is currently the largest Living Certified higher-education project. Architects from design firm Bruner/Cott & Associates, Cambridge, collaborated with Wright Builders, Inc., Northampton, to construct Kern, a multi-functional welcome center at the heart of Hampshire’s Amherst campus. Its central glass-pavilion atrium houses a café, lounge and gallery.

With help from IES, the Kern Center’s cost was reduced by using the fewest types of materials possible, creating an unembellished yet award-winning building. Recipient of a 2017 American Institute of Architects COTE Top Ten Award and featured in National Geographic magazine, the Center also earned the Boston Society of Architects Sustainable Design Honor Award, the USGBC Massachusetts Green Building Award for Beauty and the Forest Stewardship Council Leadership Award.

Kern’s materials, like the Williams Center, were vetted using Red2Green (R2G), a comprehensive tool kit developed by IES that slashes research time and costs by up to 60%. The R2G platform combines a healthy materials database with interactive product assessment software to organize and document results.

IES recently partnered with the non-profit International Living Future Institute (ILFI), which administers the LBC program, to formally launch R2G and license it to other project teams. Results are shared among users, continually expanding materials information and accelerating ILFI’s market transformation goals.

Founded in 2010, IES supports sustainable and regenerative building design, renovation and construction by screening building materials to avoid the use of toxic chemicals, one of the most challenging LBC requirements. Responding to recent growth, IES has hired six additional healthy materials specialists and expanded their office area at 85 Main St. by 50 percent. Other recent IES projects include the Hitchcock Center for the Environment, Amherst and Yale Divinity School, New Haven CT.

Integrated Eco Strategy provides material/product research support via their proprietary software platform: Red2Green (www.materiallybetter.com).